December 14th 2014. Third
Sunday of Advent - Gaudete Sunday
Gospel: John 1:6-8; 19-28
Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini,
broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don
Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...
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GOSPEL John 1:6-8; 19-28
A man came,
sent by God.
His name was John.
He came as a witness,
a witness to speak for the light,
so that everyone might believe through him.
He was not the light,
only a witness to speak for the light.
His name was John.
He came as a witness,
a witness to speak for the light,
so that everyone might believe through him.
He was not the light,
only a witness to speak for the light.
This is how John
appeared as a witness. When the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to
ask him, ‘Who are you?’ he not only declared, but he declared quite openly, ‘I
am not the Christ’. ‘Well then,’ they asked ‘are you Elijah?’ ‘I am not’ he
said. ‘Are you the Prophet?’ He answered, ‘No’. So they said to him, ‘Who are
you? We must take back an answer to those who sent us. What have you to say
about yourself?’ So John said, ‘I am, as Isaiah prophesied:
a voice that cries in the wilderness:
Make a straight way for the Lord’.
Make a straight way for the Lord’.
Now these men had been sent by the Pharisees, and they
put this further question to him, ‘Why are you baptising if you are not the
Christ, and not Elijah, and not the prophet?’ John replied, ‘I baptise with
water; but there stands among you – unknown to you – the one who is coming
after me; and I am not fit to undo his sandal-strap’. This happened at Bethany,
on the far side of the Jordan, where John was baptising.
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ
Kieran’s summary
. . . This is Gaudete Sunday, the Sunday
of Joy. What do we rejoice about in Advent? Isn’t it supposed to be a
penitential time? The Christian must always seek to be joyful, even during
penitence, because we are a Church oriented towards the Resurrection, towards the
love of God for us. There are two types of “joy”: the self-directed “joy” I
feel when I am gratified by something; and then there is true joy, which
involves rejoicing in another. The
first reading says that the Lord is going to clothe us in wedding garments. The
joy we feel as Christians is the joy of someone who is getting married. This is
the joy of giving oneself, not a joy that measures the value of something in
terms of how beneficial it is to me. John the Baptist in the Gospel reading is
a prime example of a person who is walking in the joy of the Lord. His entire
mission is to point out Christ. He will not tell us who he is himself, only who
he is not. He describes himself as a “voice”, but the words he speaks are the
words of another and they are dedicated to showing the way to Christ the true
light. Adam and Eve tried to make themselves the centre of existence, the light
of their own world, but they fell into darkness. John the Baptist, by contrast,
moves to the side and allows Jesus to come in. He allows the light to shine.
John prepared the way for the Lord to come and Jesus will come into our lives
too this Christmas if we stand aside and let him in, just as John stood aside! Our
mission is not to serve ourselves but to point to another. In the age we live,
humanity blesses its own name. We must learn to bless the name of the Lord
Joy
is always a proper state for the Christian, even in the midst of penitence
This is Gaudete Sunday, the Sunday of Joy. Advent and
Lent are both seasons of penitence, but both are broken by joyful celebrations
on the fourth Sunday of Lent and the third Sunday of Advent. The Church is always
joyful because it is primarily oriented towards Easter, towards new life.
Therefore it is always turned away from the abyss and looking towards the
heavens. Rejoicing is the proper state of the
follower of Christ, not the state of sadness! Even in the midst of tribulation
the Christian is capable of joy, but this is not to say that we are out of
touch with reality. Our joy is a joy that is full of wisdom and fully cognizant
of the negative realities in the world. The root of the word “gladness” in
Italian (“letizia”) is also used for compost - it is something fertile!
Christian gladness is a fertile state of being: it leads to something better
and more beautiful.
The joy that we experience in Advent is like the joy of
getting married. It is not a joy focussed on oneself but a joy that involves
self-giving
The first reading prepares us for this
new understanding of gladness or joy. It says: “I exult for joy in the Lord, my
soul rejoices in my God”. The speaker is to be wrapped in the garments of a
wedding ceremony, like a groom wearing a crown, or a bride wearing her jewels.
The Lord treats me as if I am about to enter a wedding ceremony and encounter
another person. The joy of entering a wedding relationship is a particular type
of joy. We can imagine a person living in solitude who enters into relationship
with others only if those relationships are beneficial to himself. Entering
into the marriage relationship is joyful but it involves donating myself to the
other. A meagre meal eaten in company is more joyful than exquisite food eaten
alone or in anger. The marriage relationship is like the earth that produces green
shoots. It is fertile to the extent that it involves self-giving and dying to
oneself.
John is a person whose focus is not on himself. He is a
voice, but he allows another to speak through him.
Let us consider the Gospel in this
light. Once again the text is focussed on John the Baptist. The passage is a
bit curious in that it involves a series of negations. A man named John is sent
from God to bear witness to the light. We are told that John himself is not the
light, and when the officials ask him who he is, he denies that he is the
Christ, Elijah or the prophet. “So who exactly are you then?” John replies, “I
am the voice of one crying in the desert.” This does not tell us who John is
either! He is only the voice - the words come from somebody else. John the
Baptist bears witness to the light, but he himself is not light. How important
this discourse is! John is the point of entry for the public ministry of Jesus.
He has learned to be free from himself. God is working through him. In fact,
Jesus says that his equal has never been born – he is the most extraordinary
man in history up to that point. But he knows how to keep himself apart and be
the voice for another. How liberating it is not to take oneself too seriously!
Adam and Eve tried to make themselves the centre, the light,
and they fell into darkness. They failed to see that we are invited to a
wedding relationship with him, not to a self-gratifying relationship with
reality
What is the problem with Adam and Eve in
Genesis 3? They try to place themselves at the centre of life, and as a result
they become lost in darkness. How wonderful and illuminating is the figure of
John the Baptist! He prepared the way for the Lord to come, and the Lord always
comes when we put ourselves to one side. For we are invited to a marriage, not
to a self-gratifying relationship with the Lord. We are called to fix our gaze
on him and not on ourselves. We are asked to be his witnesses, not advocates for ourselves. How boring it is to
listen to Christians who wish to speak primarily about what they have done, and
who speak too little about what God has done. It gives us infinitely more dignity
when we keep ourselves in our proper place, when we know how small we are, when
we appreciate that our lives are directed not towards ourselves, but towards something
else.
Our age is an age in which humanity blesses its own name.
Advent is about learning to bless the Lord’s name when he comes. And he will
certainly come if we move to the side.
We are living in an epoch where the
human being has made himself the centre, the light, the focal point of reality.
How can a creature as impoverished as I am put himself at the centre of
reality! What we need to discover, instead, is that we are central only as far
as the love of God is concerned. God is central, but he wishes to love us,
marry us, to place a crown on our head and a ring on our hand. He wishes to
unite with us and make us vest ourselves in the robe of justice, with the
beautiful mantle of his love. And we must make ourselves small, make space for
him in our lives. We must be able to say, “I was sent by God. It is not me who
determines my mission and direction in life. My task is obedience and to follow
the plan God has laid out for me. My task is to bear witness to the light, not
present myself as the light”. In the spiritual life we often encounter people
who have a messianic complex to some degree or other, people who present themselves
as saviours of others. But only Christ can save! Let us learn to relativize our
own significance! It is thanks to God that we are able to do the little that we
do! If we pretend to be able to raise up others, then we take upon our
shoulders an unbearable burden, and we will certainly disappoint. The Advent of
the Lord is about blessing his name when
he comes, and being free from preoccupation about our own. This is peace, and
detachment, and freedom.
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