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Until He comes again!

Until He comes again!
Until He comes again!

Today we begin a new season in the liturgical year – Advent.  It’s actually the beginning of a new year in the liturgical calendar, so Happy New Year!  In the past I’ve written about some of the beautiful Advent traditions of the Catholic Church (check them out by typing “advent” in the “categories” section and my previous posts should come up).  I’ve written about ways to prepare for Christmas – Jesus’ first coming.  Today I’d like to focus on ways to prepare for Jesus’ second coming.

Just two days ago the Catholic Church celebrated the Feast of St. Andrew, one of Jesus’ first disciples.    I sat and read the Gospel for the day (Matthew 4:18-22 and decided to do a lectio divina.  At first glance I thought, there’s not much to chew on here – Jesus says to Peter, Andrew, James and John, “come follow me.”  He says the same to us.  Done, right?  NOT!  I wasn’t giving up without a fight, I knew there was more to glean, so I kept at it.  Sure enough the Holy Spirit provided, as it usually does.  I asked myself, what did it take for these 4 men to give up everything they knew, all of their comforts, to follow Jesus at the drop of a net?  It took faith, sacrifice and trust.

Faith

Peter, Andrew, James and John had not only heard of Jesus, they personally witnessed His power.  Shortly thereafter they were called and followed.   They must have believed that Jesus was “the Son, in whom I am well pleased.”  God said “listen to Him” and they DID.  They possessed the faith they needed to make the Trinity a priority in their lives.

Sacrifice

Talk about sacrifice!  I would find it very difficult to walk away from my family – no questions asked.  Could I “drop my net” and leave my loved ones in the middle of the sea without asking questions?  Probably not.   I would need answers. Even when I got answers, I’m not so sure they’d be enough to leave it all behind.

Trust

How obvious the trust these men had in the Lord!   They heard His voice, they listened and they followed.  They knew nothing about what to expect, they knew nothing about where they were going and they knew nothing about when or even if they would return to their normal lives.  What they DID know was that this man they called Jesus was worth following and that He would not steer them wrong!  

Advent

This Advent I would like to take a different approach to the season.  Actually, I’d like to add my own tradition to the beautiful traditions of the Church.  I’m still going to patiently wait to decorate for Christmas.  I’m still going to focus on the reason for the season. I’ll pray with my Advent wreath and Jesse Tree.  However, I will also take stock of how much faith and trust I have in the Lord and how much I sacrifice to follow Him.  

 Advent is one of my favorite seasons. I absolutely love preparing for the coming of Jesus.  I literally feel like I’m sprucing up my house for a special guest to arrive on Christmas day and in a way, I am.   However, reading Matthew’s Gospel made me think of something else.  As Christians we believe that Jesus will come again, right? So how am I preparing my “house” for His second coming?  How am I preparing my soul for Jesus to take residence there?  In keeping with the theme of faith, sacrifice and trust, here’s what I’m thinking.

Practicing DEEP faith

This week, in his homily on the Feast of St. Andrew, the deacon talked about some powerful words the Bishop uses during ordinations.  While holding the book of the Gospels together with the priest or deacon to be ordained the Bishop says “believe what you read, teach what you believe, practice what you teach.”  Isn’t that what deep faith is all about? 

This Advent maybe we can think about whether we TRULY believe what we read in the Gospels. Do we read them enough?  Do we teach what we believe?  Teaching what we believe looks different for everyone, but how are we teaching what we believe?  Is it even important to us to teach what we believe? More importantly, is there integrity in our teaching?  In other words, are we practicing what we’re teaching?

Being counter-cultural

In today’s world and especially during the season of Advent (which the world mistakenly believes to be the Christmas season) –  sacrifice is not on anyone’s mind – in fact, overindulgence is.  So how can we sacrifice for Christ this season? We wait more, we spend less in order to teach what we believe – that the reason for the season is Christ, not gift exchange.  How can we sacrifice the rest of the year?  By stepping out of our comfort zone and doing more for Christ even when it’s inconvenient, even when we have our sights on something else.

Surrender all

This is a tough one.  Trust goes hand in hand with surrender.  How difficult that is for us humans, especially if we’ve been “graced” with the need to control.  These past few months I have been actively focusing on trusting the Lord with my life.  I believe it has everything to do with the book I just finished reading entitled Forty Weeks (I know I keep mentioning it but it has changed my life).  

So for me, in order to focus on trusting more, I have to make a conscious effort to invite the Holy Spirit into my daily life.  I have to invite the Holy Spirit into my prayer, into my thoughts and into my decision making.  This is not easy, but it CAN be done.  We just have to be aware, awake and conscious of the present. We cannot let ourselves be distracted with worry, anxiety or thoughts of the past or the future.  

Will you join me this Advent season?  Will you slow down and take stock of how well you are preparing your soul for the coming of Christ? How deep is your faith?  Are you willing to sacrifice for the one who sacrificed for you?  Will you trust that whatever He wills for you is infinitely better than anything you can ever control into being for yourself?  What are you going to do until He comes again? God bless you!

Happy watching and waiting!

Happy watching and waiting!

Blessed Sacrament

Happy watching and waiting!  Today begins the season of Advent, one of my favorites of the liturgical year – perfect for stillness and quietude.  Remember to take time during this season to slow down.  Take some time to sit before the Blessed Sacrament in the middle of your busy day or give Jesus an hour of your week to sit during Eucharistic Adoration at your parish.   Remember how saddened Jesus was when his disciples couldn’t stay awake during his agony in the garden.  “Could you not watch one hour with me,” he said.  (Mt 26:40)  He’s probably saying the same to us.

This Friday was the first Friday of the month and I spent a few hours in adoration at my parish.  We are blessed to have all night adoration on the first Friday of every month.  So there I sat, with Jesus, for a few hours – sitting, praying, reading and writing.  As I sat, just past midnight, I decided to open the missalette to Sunday’s readings and do Lectio Divina.

The first reading for this weekend is from Isaiah 63:16b-17, 19b, 64:2-7 – it starts off talking about how God is our Father and asking why He let’s us wander.  It continues with how sinful we are and how angry He is.  “Yet, O Lord, you are our father; we are the clay and you the potter; we are all the work of your hands.”

There’s that reason to HOPE again!  No matter how sinful we are,  He’s “got” this!  Those words from Isaiah stopped me in my tracks.  I read them over and over with a smile because it reminded me of how God truly IS in control of everything.  Answered prayer, unanswered prayer, suffering, joy – it’s all there to teach us, to mold us into the people he would have us become and to help us recognize His Presence around us.  In other words, the good, the bad and the ugly……..there He is in the midst of it all.  Wow! What a comfort.

I continued to read the reading for Sunday and finally came to the Gospel, taken from Mark 13:33-37.  I guess you could say it was appropriate for the season:  Advent waiting and the message:  WATCH!  “Be watchful, be alert” said Jesus to His disciples.  I’ve heard many homilies on this Gospel and the message is usually the same – we don’t know when “our time” will come or when Jesus will come again so we should never lose our focus, we should always be prepared to enter the Kingdom.  We should always be working toward an increase in holiness, growing in grace and being ready to meet Him when He comes again.

In the past, my own understanding and interpretation of this Gospel and the many homilies I’ve heard proposed that same message.  However, after reading it this week, my interpretation was a bit different.  It may have to do with my focus on contemplation these days, but I think it also has to do with the connection I made to the first reading.  You see, if God is the potter, we the clay, I think we are being called to watchfulness and awareness of Him.  “Be watchful and alert” for His Presence in the here and now and how He is working to purify us.

In other words, I think this Gospel is telling us to be on the look out for God’s action and presence in our lives.  To recognize it, surrender to it and to open our hearts to it.  Basically, go with the flow of the potter’s wheel and don’t resist.   We all know what happens to the clay when it encounters resistance!   Surrendering to God’s action and presence in our lives is the only way we will be able to experience true union with Him in this life.  The best part of this message is that we don’t have to wait until we die or for Him to come again to experience true union with Him.

This Advent, let’s challenge ourselves to be still and quiet long enough to recognize God’s presence and action in our lives, to accept it and be transformed by it!  What will you do differently this season to make that happen?  Share your thoughts with me!  Happy watching and waiting.  God bless you!
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