Almost
two weeks ago, midway between Thanksgiving and Advent, I went to Louisville for
the annual meeting of the bishops and priests’ councils of the Louisville
Province. Like any American
city at this time of year, Louisville - or, at least the little bit of downtown
that I saw - was all bright and beautiful with Christmas trees and lights and
other holiday trimmings and touches. It’s that so very special time of year,
when the world really brightens up and seems even to cheer up – or at least it
tries to.
In
our commercial, capitalist culture, of course, there is profit to be made in
manufacturing holiday cheer. For the rest of us, how cheerful we feel may
depend on what kind of year we have had and what kind of year we believe it has
been for the world. Imagine, for example, what it was like preparing for
Christmas 100 years ago, in 1917, in that terrible final year of World War I,
the war that pretty much ruined everything for the 20th century.
Still, Christmas came, as it always does in both good times and in bad. Silent Night was sung in the languages
of the different combatants. And soldiers and civilians alike did their best to
find comfort where they could.
Times
were tough too in Israel – her capital in ruins, her Temple destroyed - when
Isaiah spoke the consoling words we just heard. Just when everything seemed so
hopeless, the prophet proclaimed glad
tidings and good news. It’s
enough to make you sit up and pay attention. Here comes with power the Lord God. Like a shepherd he feeds his flock.
The glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together. Power
and glory are good, but when you’re hungry – and we are all hungry for
something – the promise of being fed, as a shepherd feeds his flock, that’s good news indeed!
On
this 2nd Sunday of Advent, the good news comes to us in three
voices. First, we hear Isaiah’s prophetic announcement. Not for nothing is
Isaiah Advent’s pre-eminent prophet. Then comes the actual voice of one crying out in the desert, John the Baptist’s New
Testament prophetic fulfillment - calling out to us to elicit our response.
Sandwiched between them and so easy to overlook, we hear Peter, speaking for
the Church, proposing our response.
And
like the Israelites in exile and like those early Christians to whom Peter
wrote, we wonder what this all means. Both Isaiah and Peter had to respond to
the tension – the personal and social stress – of being in-between, of being
between the challenging and perplexing present in which we still find ourselves
and the promising future for which we have been taught to hope.
If
anything, living in the in-between may be even harder for us that in was for
those early Christians Peter was addressing. Our contemporary way of life with
its ultra-fast pace and information overload is sort of like a collective case
of attention-deficit-disorder. Like our ancestors unexpectedly caught up in a
catastrophic world war a century ago, we are also a civilization in distress,
but we are, if anything, even less able to see our way through, thanks to our
technologically induced impatience.
But
God is patient with us, Peter assures us, not
wishing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance. And
so, he asks us to ask ourselves, what
sort of persons ought we to be, here and now, in this in-between time,
while we wait not just for Christmas morning and the presents we expect to find
under our tree, but for that endless Christmas dinner our entire life is a
preparation for?
Advent
asks more questions than it answers. The answer, of course, is Christmas, which
even now has the power to light up the world because Christ came into the world
a long time ago. How much brighter will the world be when we respond fully to
Advent’s invitation to become Christmas people and recognize Christ’s coming
among us in the here and now, living in his Church which continues his presence
and action in the world? When the full reality of Christ’s coming finally makes
a difference for each one of us. Meanwhile, be
eager, as Peter says, to find him - and to be found by him.
Homily for the 2nd Sunday of Advent, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, December 10, 2017.
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