"Prepare the way of the Lord’: this is the proclamation for the Second
Sunday of Advent. Jean Danielou wrote
over 40 years ago these words that so aptly describe our present day
reality: “The Baptist’s message is
addressed to a world held captive by sin and death, powerless to free itself, a
world destined for death and incapable of justice, a world without hope. And his happy vocation is to proclaim that
all the bonds will be broken and that love will overcome. This is already the message of grace” (Prayer, p.37). Christ is always coming—‘he comes, comes
ever-comes’, writes the poet Tagore—Advent emphasizes the God ‘who will be’ and
so John the Baptist continues his proclamation so needed right now for salvation:
for the saving grace that will free us from hopelessness, from self-centered
ways, from narrowness in perceptions, from rigidity that compromises our
ability to receive the Spirit hoverin
g over our lives. John the Baptist cries out in the wilderness
of our hearts and in the wilderness of our lost world: ‘prepare the
way’….prepare your hearts, prepare your lives….this message hidden only if we
are living at a distance from our ‘center’, from what is most true, authentic,
compassionate…from what is most God-oriented.
Turn for a moment into the silent depths: there his voice will be heard
once again….‘prepare the way’…in John’s message there is already grace…for it
contains light to guide us forward to receive God’s gift….it is a message of
comfort, it opens up for us and our world a way of salvation: a way of peace, of healing, of forgiveness.
An essential ingredient of John the Baptist’s message is
repentance. This is not Lent but it is a
time to turn inward for there is the
gift….there will be born more of
Christ’s life for each one of us in a personal way. Contemplative space, silence, inwardness:
this helps prepare the way: step out of our busyness, take space from the noise
of the political landscape right now…the One who is coming, the One to be born
will bring peace…it is important first that this gift begins with us….it will
ripple outward….each one of us together forming a living body of faith where
the God of unconditional love will be manifest.
Danielou says that Advent is a “pedagogy of faith”, but not
a faith that God exists, more strikingly that “God intervenes in history”
(p.38). God intervenes in our personal
history and in the larger history of humanity.
This is a miracle, is it not? Our
‘living faith’ pivots around this miracle.
This is how close the Divine life is to us…in and through this personal
relationship with the Christ of God we are given the Love that no one can
extinguish.
Our God is coming bringing the new of hope, the new of
compassion, of peace, of a way of meeting the ‘other’ who is different from us. This new
manifestation of God’s life is what we all need right now. Amen.
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