What should we do?” The
crowds asked John the Baptist
[Luke
3:10]. And
well might they ask! After all, what question could possibly be more basic?
Or more relevant? Or more universal? Isn’t that why we have
advice columns, website medicine, talk show chatter, expensive psychotherapy,
spiritual direction, TV’s psychic hotlines, and personal trainers, and “life
coaches” – that all purport to help people answer that question?
John,
being John, didn’t hesitate to answer – quite categorically in fact. Particular
groups – tax collectors and soldiers, for example – each got specific answers
targeted to them, tailored to the specific moral challenges connected with
their professions. John obviously believed that what one does at work matters.
In our society, certainly, we largely define ourselves by our work. Everybody
understands what is being referred to when someone is asked “What do you do?” John was neither
the first nor the last to observe that one’s work matters, what
one does at work matters, how one works matters. And it’s not just one’s
work that matters. When all is said and done, we define ourselves by
whatever we actually do – or fail to do – in all aspects of life
– at work, at home, at play, with those we love, and with those we don’t. What
I do – or don’t do – demonstrates who I am, the kind of person I am choosing to
be, and, in the end, determines who I will be for all eternity. As one of the 4th-century
Fathers of the Church, Gregory of Nyssa [335-395], once said: “we are in a sense our own parents, and we
give birth to ourselves by our own free choice of what is good.”
Of
course, we now live in a world, which has in some ways turned all that
upside down and encourages us to shift responsibility to everyone and
everything except ourselves. That’s what makes this Gospel story so
especially appropriate at this Advent midpoint. The crowd’s questions and
John’s very down-to-earth practical answers, seen in the context of the Gospel
message as a whole and as heard in this Advent setting, all seem to highlight
just what is supposed to happen when we take the Christmas story
seriously today.
Now the people, so Luke tells us, were filled with expectation [Luke 3:15]. But what were they expecting?
Santa Claus? Not likely! A year-end Christmas bonus? Probably not that either!
For that matter and more to the point, what are we expecting this
Advent? Obviously, we’re not in
expectation for Christ to be born. That already happened – a long time ago
at that! We’re not play-acting here, as if living a Christian life were
like some sort of perpetual Christmas pageant! The people, we’re told, all were asking in their hearts whether John
might be the Christ. John assured them that he wasn’t. With the benefit of
hindsight, we know even better than his hearers. In his instructions to
the tax collectors and the soldiers and everyone else, however, John was
telling the people where to look. Repeating those long-ago instructions
to us today, John is telling us too where to look – in what’s going on
in the here and now and the day-to-day. Because what was ultimately so
especially extraordinary about Jesus Christ’s becoming part of our world is
precisely how his coming has transformed the seemingly ordinary in human life
from being, at best, merely more of the same, into an opportunity for something
altogether new.
Hence
St. Paul’s powerful and challenging invitation to us to rejoice – in the
famous words which give this 3rd Sunday of Advent its special name, Gaudete: Rejoice in the Lord always. I shall say it again rejoice! The Lord is
near. Have no anxiety at all [Philippians 4:4-6].
How
does one have no anxiety at all? How can anyone do that, with all the
daily worries that weigh us down, the bills that never stop coming and seem to
get bigger all the time, the sense so many people have (especially in the last
dozen years or so) that the economic deck is stacked against them, not to
mention the big picture problems of the larger world – an epidemic of shootings in schools,
and malls, and movie theaters, wars, terrorism, fiscal cliffs, climate change –
which inevitably intrude even on our private problems? The fact that St. Paul
made his point with such emphasis, even repeating himself, might suggest that
anxiety was as much a reality for his 1st-century audience, that
they too may have found rejoicing a bit of a challenge.
Of
course, the rejoicing St. Paul prescribed was not some passing sentiment, but
rather was rooted in the new identity they had acquired as disciples of Jesus.
It’s the same for us today. It is not the ups and downs of the world around us,
but who we are becoming by our choice to live a Christian life that enables us
to rejoice and counteracts our inevitable anxieties.
Advent
expresses the fundamental character of our Christian experience, lived
(as it must be) between Christ’s 1st coming and his final advent as
our judge - and defined (as it also must be) by the Risen Lord’s
continued and active presence among us, in the here and now. And so, our
fundamental attitude (and not just at Christmas) must be to rejoice, somehow, despite the anxiety
that threatens to dominate our days. Our choice to rejoice results, St. Paul suggests, in peace – not some superficial social or political peace, but the peace of God which surpasses all
understanding [Philippians
4:4-7], the peace which
makes possible an authentic and morally compelling life (which John recommended
and Christian discipleship requires), the peace which penetrates through
our personal and social anxieties as surely as the rising sun on Christmas
morning will penetrate and defeat the deep dark of the long winter night.
Homily for the 3rd Sunday of Advent, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, Decembere 16, 2012.
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