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4th Sunday of Advent – Blessed are you

Mt. 5: 1-4a; Ps.80:2-3, 15-16, 18-19; Heb. 10:5-10; Lk. 1:39-45

“Blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb”.  Mary is not only blessed among women but blessed among all humanity for her act of faith having believed in the word spoken. 

Blessed are we when we believe and accept the word of God that comes to us in scripture and in the teachings of the church.  Blessings come through acts of faith, hope and love.  The Lord waits for us to turn to him, seek him, and love him to shower us with his blessings as a father loves his child. 

Blessed are you Elizabeth by the Holy Spirit for having believed to give birth to the child John to prepare the way of the Lord as a voice for repentance.  John prepared the way with a baptism of repentance but who baptized John?  Could John be Jesus’ first baptism in the Holy Spirit in the water of his mother’s womb? 

Born of spirit and water, John came into the world ready to lay his life down with the knowledge of a prophet having encountered his savior in his mother’s womb.  Blessed are you the unborn children who have died before birth whether by natural cause or by those who chose to end its life for the love and mercy of God is the innocent.  Yours is a special place in the kingdom of God. 

Blessed are you who fulfill the “will” of God by which “we have been consecrated” through our baptism to the Lord.  Do we realize we are born with special gifts to fulfill a calling that adds to the kingdom of God?  When we live to serve God’s will, the Lord adds to the graces we need to not only overcome all trials, hardships, and even persecution but to live in the glory of God with joyful triumph over sin, temptation, and evil. 

Again, blessed are you who believe and then act on that belief trusting in the Lord.  We are reborn in baptism to be great disciples as priests, prophets, and kings and no evil can enter when we remain faithful to the Lord. 

Blessed is this season of Advent as a time of preparation not only to get our home ready for Christmas but to prepare our souls for the Lord’s coming.  The temptation of Advent is to spend our time and energy in the external signs of his coming like a good Martha but it was Mary who chose the better part to sit and be still open to the Word of God. 

The better part for a Catholic is taking time to make a good confession, reconciling and making peace with family and friends, coming to Church to give thanks to the Lord for the blessings of this year and giving the gift of self by our love for others. 

The blessing of Advent is the giving of Jesus to us and our giving of self to him.  In this the word is fulfilled “He takes away the first to establish the second”.  God the Father takes away the sacrifice for fulfilling the old law and gives us the new law by example of his son Jesus as a sacrifice of self. 

It is in giving of ourselves that we are born to eternal life.  This Advent let us be true lovers of God by the many ways we can be a blessing to others by the gift of self that is greater than any material gift wrapped in paper.  There was a priest back in the 80’s who would sing the same little chorus at daily Mass here at St. Francis Xavier “Count your blessing, count them one by one…” 

We are more prone to keep count of the things that go wrong than all the blessings to go right in our life.  Sometimes even when something is a setback it can be a form of blessing reminding us to trust in the Lord, give it to him, and remain at peace knowing all things work for the good of those who serve the Lord. 

The psalm prays for the desire to see the face of the Lord and yet we can only see a reflection of his face when we gaze upon a newborn baby or see a mother bird hover over the nest of her babies, or a 90 year old man sit in silent prayer.  It is moments like these that we realize there is a greater purpose in life than to simply to go about our business absorbed by the demands of this world.

Blessed are we when our life is set in right order before the face of God.  The God who sees all and knows the depths of our hearts will reward his faithful this Advent with his coming to fill us with his love, mercy, and grace.  Let us count our blessings and give thanks for the gift of Christ our Lord born in a manger to show us the way. 

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3rd Sunday of Advent – Rejoice in the Lord

Zep.3: 14-18a; Ps.12:2-6; Phil. 4:4-7; Lk. 3:10-18

Rejoice in the Lord who comes with the good news of salvation.  This is the 3rd week of Advent and the color of the candle is pink to represent the joy of the Lord’s coming.  It also signifies the joy of the Shepherds when the angel told them that Christ was to be born.  We are to come to the Lord in a spirit of thanksgiving in our prayer and petition knowing that we belong to God and our peace rests in him. 

Anxiety, stress, worries then is a sign that we lack the peace of God and our minds and hearts are restless not with fear of the Lord but with fear of the world.  Fear and worry not only steal our joy but it can lead to despair and darkness separate from the light of Christ.  We cannot rejoice in the Lord simply by hearing the good news but by living the good news.  This is the message of John the Baptist who gives to each the answer to “What should we do?”  We rejoice in the Lord by doing what is right, just, charitable, and loving. 

We rejoice in the Lord because the “great and Holy one” is among us and “the Lord has removed the judgment against you”.  The Lord comes with glad tidings of his mercy to wipe away our sins.  He restores us to wholeness in recovery of our brokenness.  It is up to us however to avoid sin and the near temptation to sin.  This is not easy but we can begin by avoiding people, places, and things as much as possible that tempt us to sin. 

The people ask, “What are we to do?”  Treat others as you would like to be treated and know when to engage and when to walk away.  Two young seminarians were walking through the mall on a summer day where there were young women lightly dressed in shorts and tops.  One could not avoid staring while the other simply tried to look away.  One said to the other, “I think its time to leave and go to the car and say a rosary.”  Which of the two made the request to leave speaks to the faithful heart.  It could have been the one who had had enough temptation or the one who simply felt no need to be in that environment. 

“What are we to do?”  We rejoice in the Lord, trust in the Lord, pray to the Lord and give thanks to the Lord for the answer to our prayer that his will be done.  We rejoice in the Lord when we pray “Blessed be God, blessed be his Holy name, all glory and honor is yours almighty Father”.  We rejoice in the name of Jesus that we have been redeemed, forgiven of our sins, and restored to holiness.  This is why we rejoice in the holy cross of Jesus and carry it on us as a sign that we belong to him and he is our savior. 

What are we to do with anxiety?   We read that we are to “have no anxiety at all” but anxiety and worries are not the same thing.  Worries come from our thoughts and we can change our thinking about a situation.  Our thought can lead us to action to face our worries and resolve our concerns.  We also can surely pray and petition to the Lord all our concerns.  Anxiety however goes beyond our thoughts as an attack on the body. 

First of all, as someone who has suffered with anxiety it can be a very debilitating cross.  It is the evil one’s thorn at my side that remains despite all prayer and learning how not to feed into it.  It does not come from my thoughts or else I would long have changed my thinking.  It comes suddenly as an autonomic nervous system response of the body.  The body is broken and gradually begins to fail us.  Our soul however can also be injured from anxiety but it can be healed and learn to be free from the attack of anxiety even if the autonomic response of the body remains.  We must prepare for the death of the body but rejoice in the freedom it will bring to the soul for we will be given a new body that will not perish and body and soul will be eternal.  This is our joy in the Lord that our God comes to renew us and set us free from sin, sickness, and the death of this body.

Advent is our time to rejoice in the Lord for his coming is our freedom. 

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2nd Sunday of Advent – A work in progress

Bar.5: 1-9; Ps.126:1-6; Phil. 1:4-6, 8-11; Lk. 3:1-6

The Lord has begun the good work in us and will bring it to completion but as any good work in progress it takes two, God and our response to God.  We are not passive participants in the work of our conversion but required to be joined to the Lord through the grace and gifts we are given.  The Lord saves but he will not save us without us.  We must desire his glory and be prepared for his calling in the way that we are to follow. 

The Lord does great things for us who are open to the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  We cannot just go about our like and expect great things to happen simply because God is good.  Great things include the work in progress for our salvation.  It is not enough to just say “Lord, Lord” in a moment of need and ignore our Lord for most of our days.  The work that has begun in us is for a divine purpose “to discern what is of value” for our souls to be “pure and blameless”.  The work in progress for the conversion of sinners to saints. 

The Church is given to us to “prepare the way of the Lord”.  It is the Church that determined which books belong to the canon in the Bible.  It is the Church that Jesus instituted to continue to consecrate bread and wine to bring us his body and blood.  It is the Church who Jesus gave authority to bring us the sacraments including the forgiveness of sins.  Many claim to believe in God but not in his church.  The devil also believes in God but not in obedience to God.  We can all say that every day we are all a work in progress but we are not all headed in the same direction.  Not everyone who says “Lord, Lord” will enter the kingdom of God. 

We are told “all flesh shall see the salvation of God” but it will be little consolation if he simply slips passed us.  The gospel reveals to us how in the time of Jesus, John went about preparing the way with a call to repentance.  Repentance is more than just our sins that we can confess.  Repentance is also to make straight our path by the way we live our lives, the values we hold onto, and our priorities in life.  For example, a good question to ask ourselves is what time, talent and treasure to we give to God through prayer, charity, and service?  How we spend our time is a good measure of what we really value in life. 

The first step on the way to Jesus is to acknowledge not only our sins but also our failure to come to Jesus.  Jesus desires our hearts and he offers us his heart of love yet our indifference towards God is the sin of what we have failed to do in response to God’s love.  Jesus came in the flesh and yet most of the world denied him or cried out “crucify him”.  We too can deny him with our indifference of his presence in this world. 

When our thoughts center on us and God is given lip service we return to the days of the Pharisees and Sadducees who stood in the temple only to be noticed but their hearts were far from God.  If God is seen as simply being far above in the heavens we miss out on his revelation in our lives.  Jesus is alive!  He lives to live in us and for us to live in him.  This is what we celebrate with the “splendor of God forever”.  We rejoice not only in a person but in a relationship that saves.  We rejoice because we see the hand of God guiding us, and the greater he reveals himself to us the greater our desire for him to open our minds and hearts to his will.  A restless heart can only find rest in Jesus’ plan for our lives. 

Doing the will of God is our peace.  God’s will is not a promise of an easy road.  It is a promise of victory in the transformation of our lives that the work he has begun in us we will see revealed in his glory for all eternity. 

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