December 3rd 2017. First Sunday of
Advent
GOSPEL: Mark 13:33-37
Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini,
broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...
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Reflection)
GOSPEL: Mark 13:33-37
Jesus said to his disciples:
"Be watchful! Be alert!
You do not know when the time will come.
It is like a man traveling abroad.
He leaves home and places his servants in charge,
each with his own work,
and orders the gatekeeper to be on the watch.
Watch, therefore;
you do not know when the Lord of the house is coming,
whether in the evening, or at midnight,
or at cockcrow, or in the morning.
May he not come suddenly and find you sleeping.
What I say to you, I say to all: 'Watch!'"
"Be watchful! Be alert!
You do not know when the time will come.
It is like a man traveling abroad.
He leaves home and places his servants in charge,
each with his own work,
and orders the gatekeeper to be on the watch.
Watch, therefore;
you do not know when the Lord of the house is coming,
whether in the evening, or at midnight,
or at cockcrow, or in the morning.
May he not come suddenly and find you sleeping.
What I say to you, I say to all: 'Watch!'"
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you
Lord Jesus Christ
Kieran’s
summary . . . The first reading from
Isaiah is very beautiful and deserves to be read. In it we hear the cry of a
people who are poor, miserable and oppressed. They have sinned and turned away
from God, but now they know they need him and they call on him to come! This
too is our cry! The issue is not about knowing when the Lord is going to come:
the issue is being ready at all times to
encounter that which is greater than us, that which is life-giving. Since
the time of Adam and Eve, we have tried to have things under our control, but
the coming of the Lord into our lives is completely in the hands of God.
Waiting for the Lord and being vigilant for his coming is essential. Waiting,
in fact, is an important part of life. From the waiting involved in pregnancy
to the waiting involved in giving time to others, life calls us to forgo the
things that we want to do right now. But our society is hooked on
entertainment, distraction and ever-new escapes from reality. Satan is
described in Revelation as the one who goes around in a fury because he knows
he has little time. Time is a gift of God and we must use it to be obedient, to
wait patiently, to look to the Lord, to be on our guard not to let the enemy
enter. Those who do not know how to wait on the Lord are driven by appetites,
impulses, and interior aggression. This Gospel tries to shake us out of our half-drugged
coma in which we carry on, following ourselves and do not look to the Lord.
Advent tells us that the King of kings is coming right to our homes and that we
must be ready for him! When an important visitor comes, it is right that we get
the place in order for him, that we throw out all that is incompatible with his
presence.
The first reading from Isaiah is the cry of a people
who have turned away from God and now realize that they are desperately in need
of his visitation
The very
important season of Advent begins, the start of a new liturgical year, and it
is set in motion with a word of great beauty and appropriateness from chapter 63 of the prophet Isaiah. “Oh,
that you would rend the heavens and come down . . .” Here is expressed
the burning desire of a people to be visited by God. This part of the book of
Isaiah was written in the period after the exile. The people were poor,
miserable and oppressed. “Return for the sake of your servants!” the reading
says. “Once you did marvels for us that we did not expect. No eye has seen, no
ear has heard any God but you perform such deeds”. This is the recollection by
a people in a state of misery of the wonderful deeds the Lord once did for
them. But they have not been mindful of the Lord. They have squandered the
gift of faith that was given to them. Having brought evil upon themselves, they
now are in need of the visitation of God. Various verses from the cry of this
poor people, as expressed in chapters 63 and 64 of Isaiah, are put together in
our first reading on Sunday.
The issue is not knowing when the Lord will come:
the issue is being always ready in life to encounter what is greater than us,
to encounter the in-breaking of God into our lives.
How should we welcome the Lord who comes to
visit us? Advent tells us that the Lord is not distant in the heavens while we
try to get by on earth. This season announces that He is coming to meet us. It is important to be ready
and to be free from the wrong sort of expectations. In the Gospel, Jesus says, "Be watchful! Be alert! You
do not know when the time will come.” We could reply: “Tell us when you are
coming, Lord, so that we can be ready for you”. But the problem is not that the
Lord comes without warning: the issue at the heart of being vigilant is a
different matter altogether. We are called as a people to be always ready to
encounter that which is greater than we are. But we try to flee from this
situation. Since the time of Adam and Eve we have sought the fruit of the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil. We wish to know everything that relates to
our own destiny and we pretend to be able to keep our lives within the control
of our own schemes. But this is not possible! We simply must recognize that we
have no other option than to be ready for the unexpected, to be prepared for
the occurrence of the sublime, of that which is outside of our control. As the Gospel
says, our gatekeeper must be on the look-out. A building without a doorman is liable
to have strangers entering and wandering around the house without the owner’s
consent. In life, we all have need of a gatekeeper who is constantly on guard.
When we are on guard, we can prevent the enemy, deceit, and treachery from entering
in. It is essential that we all be vigilant.
Life involves having the ability to wait, the
ability to give one’s time up for others and the Lord. Satan is the one who
cannot wait because he is so preoccupied with his own schemes
Waiting might
seem like a frustrating business, but without waiting there is no life! Pregnancy
is a time of waiting. Life involves having the ability to wait. Some people are
capable of waiting and giving their time to people, whilst others are
impatient. It is interesting that in the book of Revelation, chapter 12, the
devil is defined as the one who is full of fury because he knows he has little
time. But none of us have our own time in reality because time is made by God. It
is not necessary for us to have time
but to be obedient to time, obedient
to reality. Those who are not obedient to time, those who do not know how to
wait, are driven by impulses and appetites and interior aggression. The text
tells us to be vigilant at evening, at midnight, at cockcrow and in the morning,
the four classic watches of the night when the changing of the guard used to
happen. The sentries must always be ready because life is important!
This Gospel tries to shake us out of our
half-drugged coma in which we go from one distraction to another, one entertainment
to another. This Advent we are called to empty ourselves of those things that
are incompatible with our Lord, who is on his way to us very soon
This passage
calls us to stop going on in an unthinking daze. Don’t forget, we live in a
society hooked on entertainment, diversions, distractions. Our society is, as
it were, in a half-drugged coma, constantly looking for new escapes from
reality. Advent is the marvellous announcement of the visitation by God, a fact
that requires us to have our feet soundly planted in reality. We are called to
live in a way that is attentive to life, that is in harmony with what is
essential, ready for the visit of our Master who is coming again. He will come
again! And when he comes it will be beautiful to be with him. Advent is an
illuminating time. It is not a sad time. It is indeed a time of penitence,
certainly it is! Everything that is incompatible with the coming of the Lord
must be thrown away. The more the better. There is nothing surprising about
that. When someone important comes to our house, we get the place in order
before he arrives. Let us prepare ourselves for the Lord’s visit because the King
of kings is coming right to our door!
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