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4th Sunday of Advent – Called to be holy!

Is. 7:10-14; Ps. 24:1-6; Rom. 1:1-7; Mt.1:18-24

Called to be holy!   This is our Advent call to search and reach for holiness which is to search and reach for God himself.  We are all called to be holy by the grace of God who is with us.  “Let the Lord enter; he is king of glory”.  What keeps us from holiness?  Why this resistance to God, to let him enter into our being, to welcome him as our Lord and savior?  Is it simply our attachment to sinful things or is there something greater here?  It is the original sin to be our own God.  We may utter the words “I believe” but our actions show we want to save ourselves, be our own king in our kingdom and keep the Lord on standby for if and when we need to call out to him.  The pride to do it our way and avoid the plan God desires for us. 

Joseph a righteous man was ready to do things his way, to divorce Mary quietly, save face and not expose her to shame but that was not God’s plan.  In difficult circumstances we often react with a desire for the quick fix when God’s plan may have a greater challenge for us, a greater blessing to come, a call to holiness and sainthood.  Had Joseph acted on his intentions, ignored his dream and divorced Mary, Mary would still have fulfilled the prophecy of Emmanuel and had the child Jesus.  Joseph would have gone on with his life believing in his righteousness and missed the opportunity to be a great saint.  Joseph had a free will choice to make and he listened and believed in the Lord.  It was not about him but about his obedience to God that fulfilled his righteousness. 

Joseph’s apostleship was to Jesus and Mary.  The call to holiness was in caring, protecting, and loving his family.  The grace of apostleship is given to us in baptism and our first responsibility as apostles is to our domestic church at home.   To be “apostle” is to be sent as missionary and teacher to others.  Husbands and wives come from two different worlds and are united as one to offer each other the fruit of love having much to learn from each other “sent” to be united in one faith.  Our children are our mission to bring up in the faith and if blessed to live and see our grandchildren grow to plant those seeds of faith that will remain with them their whole life.  Our call to holiness and apostleship begins right where we are in the home.

4th Sunday of Advent is the final call to holiness before the coming of the Lord this Christmas.  It is a season in which we are to shed ourselves of those preoccupations that fill our days with the clutter of life that steals our time away from our focus on what is important.  So let us ask ourselves “what is important?”.  Is God important to give him ourselves by our prayers, sacrifices, and our hearts?  Is our family important to make time to be at peace sharing the joy of life together and not distracted by all those time fillers that occupy our day?  Is our Church important to contribute to the community of faith by our participation in Mass and all the Holy Days of obligation?  These are the foundation stones to holiness that are God given and not to be ignored. 

“Let the Lord enter; he is the king of glory”.  It is time to prepare to receive Jesus as a child with a child’s heart.  A child’s heart is full of wonder at the miracles of life, all the goodness God has created in this world, all the beauty of nature including our humanity, all the truth of God that even science cannot explain and all the unity we can bring being of one mind, heart, and love with Emmanuel and with each other. 

Mary the virgin Mother of God was herself to remain with us for all time as a sign of love “behold your mother”.  Mary remains at the side of Jesus and Jesus hears the love of his mother when she intercedes for us then she turns to us and says “do whatever he says”.  If today you hear his voice do whatever he says.  God’s plan is the perfect plan in the call for holiness. 

Joseph and Mary humbled themselves and by accepting the call to holiness life was never about them but serving the one true God. Did they sacrifice?  Yes!  Did they suffer?  Yes!  Did they have regrets along the way, question their decisions or call out to God in despair?  I would say not because God was with them, revealing himself and in doing so they were able to “fear not, be strong” and trust in the Lord.  Now it’s our turn to fear not, be strong, follow the will of the Lord and he will remain with us.  We turn to you O Lord with childlike confidence and welcome you this Christmas in the manger of our hearts and home. 

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3rd Sunday of Advent – “Be strong, fear not!”

Is. 35:1-6a, 10; Ps. 146:6-10; Jas. 5:7-10; Mt.11:2-11

“Be strong, fear not!” In our weakness be strong and fear not for the Lord comes “with vindication; with divine recompense he comes to save you.”  This is the promise of the Lord “he comes to save us” at the proper hour he comes calling us to be patient while we endure the test before us.  The Lord’s coming is always present to us when we offer up our cross.  The Lord comes in many ways and not always as we expect or anticipate.  He may come to us in a spirit of consolation, in the support of a friend or stranger, in the answered prayer over time and sometimes in the moment and miracle of the day.  One thing is certain the Lord never fails at his coming to us for he is faithful. 

In an age of instant gratification and buying power “we want it now” whatever “it” is.  Patient endurance is rejected in our culture as a sign of weakness not strength.  This is the deception of the evil one to fill us with false pride and the illusion of being strong to make all things happen if only we are strong enough.  The truth from God is “I have the strength for everything through him who strengthens me”, Philippians 4:13.  Only in Christ comes our strength thus, to be strong and fear not is to be in Christ and he in us.  It is then that we find ourselves, our true self in God.

“The Lord gives sight to the blind”.  How many of us if not for the aid of eye-glasses, or surgery would not be able to see clearly or even drive? Do we count our blessings that in the mystery of life science and faith meet to provide for our needs.  Yet the Lord desires to give us a greater gift of sight to see him before us, to see in our hearts his desire for us, and to see the work of his hand in our life.  Our prayer, “Lord, help me to see your will at work in all my circumstances that I may be strong and fear not in going forth.” 

“The Lord secures justice for the oppressed”.  In a world of injustice, we can feel vulnerable and fearful to take the next right step or assume to be strong is to “take matters into our hands”.  Who has time to wait for the Lord?  The one who first places his problem before the Lord, trusts in the Lord and then acts upon discernment as the voice of the Lord comes in spirit and in truth to show us the way.  This is being prudent and wise with patient endurance.  Justice belongs to the Lord.  “Do not complain…that you may not be judged” according to your own standards in the same way as we pray “lead us not into temptation and forgive us our sins as we forgive” others.  Here lies the mystery of the mercy of God by how much we love and show mercy that we may not be judged. 

John the Baptist sent his disciples to Jesus with the question “Are you the one who is to come…?”  Jesus’ response was “Go and tell John what you hear and see”.  The answer was found in the fruit of Jesus.  We come to believe in the one sent to us by his work in us but he cannot work if we are not willing to place ourself before him and walk in his steps.  Can we follow in his ways or do we remain in our way, the way driven by only our human desires?  We are called to be saints and Jesus is the way the truth, and light in the darkness of this world. 

Ironically, we sometimes want to be strong and fear not in the things of the world but when it comes to being strong in the Lord, strong enough to surrender to him our very self we become fearful of letting go and letting God be our God.  This is where our spiritual battle begins with ourself, the greater challenge in our life.   It is less about the problems of the world and more about this relationship we have with our God, creator, redeemer and sanctifier who is looking at us and patiently waiting for us to come to him because he has already come to us.  Be strong and fear not to come to the Lord this Advent to receive Christmas, “mas de Cristo” more of Christ. 

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2nd Sunday of Advent – Prepare the way!

Is. 11:1-10; Ps. 72:1-2, 7-8, 12-13,17; Rom. 15:4-9; Mt. 3:1-12

“Prepare the way of the Lord” in our hearts, in our welcome and by our fruits.  A welcoming heart bears fruit for the Lord.  We prepare the way of the Lord with a perpetual fiat to the Lord to welcome him into our hearts, to allow his transformation of our very being, to receive the gifts he desires to pour into our souls which by evidence bears the fruit each gift is destined to produce.  Second Sunday of Advent has Thanksgiving holiday, Black Friday and Cyber Monday in the rear-view mirror and culturally there is this rush to get ready for Christmas Day with decorations of lights and gift wrapping and the atmosphere is festive.  Some may be getting ready to make tamales, some of us are ready to buy. 

Advent for the Christian is a season of spiritual preparation “tamales for the soul”.  Each week has a particular significance in preparation for the coming of Jesus.  It is represented by four candles, three purple and one pink.  Purple has a somber aspect of preparation.  The First Advent purple candle is for “Hope”, hope for our forgiveness and salvation at the Lord’s coming.  We recognize we need God in our lives and we hope his coming will find us ready because we have lived a life for Him still worthy even when we have failed.  

The Second Advent purple candle is for “Love”, love of God and love of other.  It is taking our love into a deeper relationship, deep than our thoughts, deeper than our feelings, deeper than our will takes us.  It is a love that calls for sacrifice to fulfill God’s purpose for us in this life.  It is a love that dares to ask the question “what is your will for me O’ God that I may follow?” 

The Third Advent candle changes to pink to symbolize a change of spirit to “Joy”.  Joy comes because God hears us and answers our prayers.  It is the joy of being a child of God and he is our Father.  It is the joy of belonging, we belong to God, we belong the kingdom of heaven, we belong to something greater for all eternity.  We belong and nothing can take it away from us, not the evil one, not the world, not even our weakness to sin can deny it from us as long as we return to him to be reconciled in truth. 

The Fourth and final Advent candle returns to purple and is a sign of “Peace”, the peace that the Lord gives.  He gives us his peace with “a spirit of wisdom and understanding, a spirit of counsel and of strength, a spirit of knowledge and fear of the Lord.”  This is his peace for us that we know Him and that we know he knows us and loves us and we have prepared ourselves to receive him so that every day is Christmas in God’s house.  God’s house is his Church and God’s house is the temple we have prepared for him in our souls and so it begins as it did that fateful day for a young girl who responded to an angel with her fiat, “May it be done to me according to your word.” (Lk 1:38). 

Our first act of faith, hope, and love is to say yes to the Lord and receive him.  This act of the will we trust in the Church and in our parents to begin to prepare the way of the Lord by bringing our children to be received in baptism.  Baptism by its very act opens the way of the Lord as the soul receives the Holy Spirit to dwell in us.  This fiat is perpetually carried forward throughout life to welcome the Lord each day renewed in faith, hope and love for the Lord and his people. 

Baptism is the seed to be nurtured, cultivated, and grow in relationship with God.  It is a lack of faith to ignore this responsibility to our children who are given to us to prepare the way of the Lord in them.  To say “I believe” is to enter into a covenant with God where we are by obedience called to shepherd others into the kingdom of God.  What will we say at judgment when called to give account for the souls of our children, “I fed, clothed, housed and educated them to succeed in the world but did little to know, love and serve God”. 

Today’s culture teaches children to discover their gender, their sexual preference, their truth without any authority or power of creation.  This is in essence to design and create themselves based on the passions of the flesh with no higher authority of life than the “self” to be their own God and go their own way.  Where is the bridge to prepare the way of the Lord in their hearts if not in the domestic church at home?  The world has long ago “canceled” God out of the public square.  Home is where we prepare the way of the Lord because together, we speak of the Lord, we pray to the Lord, we celebrate the Lord.  The heart grows in love of the Lord by the love of the home.  In this we all take responsibility and share in preparing the way of the Lord.  

We prepare the way of the Lord by belonging to something greater than ourselves.  Our church provides us this gift and opportunity to belong to a greater community of believers, to speak as one voice in prayer and worship of the Lord and to serve each other and those in need from the gifts we are blessed to receive.  Jesus instituted the Church to be the one bridge to receive him in the fullness of his body, blood, soul and divinity.  When we come to receive him, we bring him the fruit of our love as our gift from the past day or week as an offering of our devotion to the Lord.  He welcomes us to be of one heart and mind with him. 

To “welcome” is “to think in harmony with one another” taking time to listen and understand who is before us.  Let this be our welcome to the Lord this Advent, that we take time to quiet our minds and listen to the voice of God speaking even as we go about our day, or as we speak with each other seeking to understand and be in harmony with one another.  This will be the fruit of our Advent preparation, the “evidence of your repentance” says John the Baptist.  This evidence comes together in our hope, love, joy and peace as we welcome the child Jesus this Christmas with the love, we embrace each other. 

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