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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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Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God

Num. 6:22-27; Ps. 67:2-3,5,6,8; Gal. 4:4-7; Lk. 2:16-21

The Blessing!  The Church brings in the “New Year” with “The Blessing”, a revelation to the world, “Mary, Mother of God” in Greek “Theotokos”.  In these few words blood has been shed, people become divided, and theologians debate.  The conflict is not Mary but her title as Mother of God because she points to Jesus Christ as God.  We are in the Christmas time of celebrating Emmanuel God is with us.  He is with us in Jesus Christ.  The argument is framed that Mary in her humanity in time cannot be the Mother of God who is eternal from the beginning in his divinity.  Yet that is exactly who Jesus is the Word made flesh to be among us.  Mary’s title is not to draw attention to herself but to who Jesus is as the second person of the Trinity. 

In the Abrahamic religions Jews, Christians, and Muslims have no consensus on this core belief.  Muslims venerate Mary but see Jesus as another prophet.  Jews rejected Jesus as an anathema for claiming to be equal to God demanding his death.  Even in some Protestant Christian churches Mary is simply the woman who gave birth to Jesus without any veneration.  The central point is not Mary but who is Jesus?  In Christology, the study of Jesus Christ the early church debated this issue.  Was he fully human called to rise to a divine life, was he fully divine simply appearing as human or was he part humanity and part divinity?  The answer comes in his name Emmanuel, God is with us, God in the second Person of the Trinity, the Word made flesh fully human and fully divine. 

The Child Jesus in his humanity received from his parents two witnesses of holiness, Mary’s humility and Joseph’s obedience.  Three times an angel appears to Joseph and he was obedient.  First the angel tells Joseph to take Mary with child as his wife and he obeyed.  The second to take Mary and child to Egypt and he obeyed.  The third to return to Israel after Herod’s death and he obeyed.  Jesus was an obedient child to his parents and to the divine purpose for which he came.  Mary humbled herself at the annunciation giving her fiat to be with child.  Mary remained by Jesus side in humility with the words “do as he says”.  Jesus, fully divine, Christ the King humbled himself in humanity going forth proclaiming the Word. 

Imagine a New Year’s resolution to practice humility and obedience.  It would be awesome and terrible at the same time.  Awesome to seek the ideal of love in Jesus Christ and terrible to experience our constant bruising from falling from the ideal repeatedly.  The barrier to living the ideal is pride.  Pride not in the ordinary acceptance of being a child of God but in the disordered desire to impose our will onto other including God.  God says “come follow” and our pride says “God follow me”.  Mary and Joseph provide us the ordered way to follow in humility and obedience to sanctity.  The Blessing of the Lord is to “keep you” for his love, to let his face give us the light of truth that we shine with holiness, that he see us with his kindly mercy and receive peace as we invoke his name Emmanuel, God is with us and venerate his mother Mary the Mother of God. 

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4th Sunday of Advent

Is. 7:10-14, 10; Ps. 24:1-6 (7c-10b); Rom. 1:1-7; Mt. 1:18-24

Emmanuel, God is with us!  Today the Holy Family, Mary, Jesus, and Joseph are with us revealed through the angels of the Lord. Let the Lord enter our heart and reign as king of glory.  We belong to the Lord but the next step is ours to take and ascend the mountain of righteousness “whose hands are sinless, whose heart is clean, who desires not what is vain”.  How is this to be if we are a sinful people?  The more we seek the face of God the more we shed the sin of this world.  His face comes as a child in a manger reaching out for the human touch of a mother and father. 

Mother Mary and Joseph, son of David, were not afraid to accept what the angels of the Lord spoke to them.  In trusting God, they fulfill the sign given to Ahaz through Isaiah God’s messenger, “the virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall name him Emmanuel”.  Ahaz was asked to ask for a sign but rather coy did not want to “tempt the Lord” meaning he did not trust God he looked to his own strategy to protect himself.

Mary and Joseph trusted God becoming instruments of God’s love and mercy.  Christmas is our calling not to be afraid to be instruments in the hand of God.  Seek the face of God and ascend the mountain of holiness.  The mystery of life is the God of the present thus the past and the future is always tied to the present and we serve a greater purpose than our own brief time on earth.  This is our time to contribute to the eternal plan of salvation and to enter into it forever. 

Jesus calling was to be “Emmanuel, God is with us” given by name.  We each carry a name and our name is a sacred calling.  It may be the name given at birth but we also see in biblical history God giving those he called by name a new name with a spiritual meaning to serve a greater purpose.  Jesus gives Peter the name Cephas meaning Rock when the spirit reveals to Peter who Jesus is.  Joseph in Hebrew has the meaning “he will add”.  Joseph adds to the mystery of faith as a silent voice by his obedience. 

Have you ever had a personality type test that identifies your traits?  Named Jose carrying Joseph’s name sake my personality traits in the Briggs Myer test comes out as an “INTJ” meaning Introvert, iNtuitive, Thinking, and Judging.  Introverts are of few words and in all of scripture Joseph is not quoted.  His actions did all the talking and no words were needed.  Joseph was Intuitive by understanding the consequence of revealing Mary being with child was a death sentence and so remained silent.  Joseph was Thinking of the righteous manner in which to “divorce her quietly” and save both their lives. Joseph was Judging rightly to follow with obedience the angel of the Lord’s message.  One of the strengths of an INTJ is that of “strategist”.  A good strategist listens to the voice of God before entering into battle against the enemy.  The voice says “fear not, I am with you.” 

Was Joseph an INTJ we do not know but we can see in his actions one virtue needed in all of us and that is humility.  Humility is the first unifying virtue in receiving Jesus as Lord and savior.  Jesus humility is coming as a child without fear trusting in the humility of a mother and father to follow the spirit of truth.  Jesus trusted in Mary and Joseph to be love and sacrifice for his love.  What does your name represent and what name may Jesus be offering as a true calling that unites who he created us to be in his image with the unique characteristics of our personality?    Ask and it shall be revealed. 

Finally, Advent is a time to prepare ourselves with the love of a child to receive the love of Christ.  It is a time to reflect on the love of God in all the blessing of life beginning with life itself.  It is a time to reflect the image of God in our love to others, a word of thanksgiving, a praise of recognition, an act of charity, a silent act of obedience to the will of God for a greater good.  God is with us as he comes inviting us to a closer walk of love. 

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