First Sunday of Advent
In
this new liturgical year, I want to shift my focus a little bit in the homilies
I preach. Last year I tried to
focus on the gift of faith and spreading the Gospel. That certainly will still come up in my homilies, as it is a
perennial aspect of our faith. But
this year I want to focus more on the prayers that I say in your name during
the Mass as a way of encouraging us to participate more fully in the Divine
Mysteries in which we partake, and challenging us to take that participation
outside the doors of this church.
We
are probably now used to the new translations. Some of us may not like them; that’s fair. I personally love them, because I see
in them the beauty which is contained in the mother tongue of our church:
Latin. The form of the prayer is much
more deprecatory, that is, it does not treat God as an equal, but addresses Him
as the Almighty, and takes the position of one who is a servant of God. They are filled with Biblical language,
and are sometimes taken from the words of our earliest saints. For the most part, they are not long,
but are very Roman in style: nobly simple.
Our
Collect, what some refer to as the Opening Prayer, states: “Grant your
faithful, we pray, almighty God, the resolve to run forth to meet your Christ
with righteous deeds at his coming, so that, gathered at his right hand, they
may be worthy to possess the heavenly Kingdom.” As Advent is a time focused on preparing for Christ in His
three comings—long ago as an infant at Bethlehem, at the end of time when the
Kingdom of God is established in its fullness, and in our hearts each day—this
Collect, this collection of all our private prayers, already points us to the
coming Kingdom of Christ. It asks
for the strength of will, the resolve, to run forth with righteous deeds at His
coming. Now, I’m not a runner,
like my parents and my sisters.
I’m a sprinter, so I don’t like to run for long periods of time. And, to be honest, I don’t really
sprint that much anymore, either.
But when I do run, when I try to get somewhere fast, it is often to
catch up to somebody to give them something or to get their attention.
There is a certainly excitement in
running, especially to meet someone.
One need only think of movies where two people are running to meet each
other, often with joyous, longing music in the background. But our prayer asks us for the strength
to run to meet Christ, not with our legs, but with our “righteous deeds,” our
actions that help to build the Kingdom of God here on earth.
This
idea of running is in contrast to what we hear in our Prayer after Communion:
“May these mysteries, O Lord, in which we have participated, profit us, we
pray, for even now, as we walk amid passing things, you teach us by them to
love the things of heaven and hold fast to what endures.” While our good deeds are meant to help
us to run to meet Christ at His coming, we walk amid passing things, the things
of earth. Our prayer reminds us
that the things of this earth, as good as they are, pass away, and should not
give us the same excitement as the things of heaven and preparing for Jesus’
second coming. As the first
reading states, we should stream towards the mountain of the Lord, to the
temple of God on Mount Zion. As
Christians, our real temple is the heavenly Jerusalem, the heavenly temple,
where God reigns with the Lamb-that-was-Slain at His right hand. We should be rejoicing to go to the
House of the Lord, as our Psalm mentioned, the House that lasts forever, that
is not built with human hands, but was built by God.
And
we should be prepared to rejoice at Jesus’ coming, because we do not know the
day nor the hour. For those who
have their hearts set on the things of the world, that day will catch them off
guard, as our Gospel said. Just
like those before the flood who “were eating and drinking, marrying and giving
in marriage, up to the day that Noah entered the ark,” and who perished, if we
remain focused too much on the things of this earth, and not concerned enough
with our eternal salvation, then Jesus’ coming will not give us cause to run
towards him, but might cause us to slink away from him, backing up ever so
slowly so as to avoid notice.
How
do we prepare ourselves, then? How
do we focus on what is to come and want to run out to meet Jesus? Our Prayer over the Offerings gives us
a clue: “Accept, we pray, O Lord, these offerings we make, gathered from among
your gifts to us, and may what you grant us to celebrate devoutly here below
gain for us the prize of eternal redemption.” When we take the things of the earth—our time that we spend
here, our money that we donate, our attention, the bread and wine—and give them
back to God, we show that we are first and foremost concerned with Him. And then, as God takes our gifts that
we have and offers us the most precious gift, the Body and Blood of His Son,
that what we celebrate here below in sacramental signs, prepares us for
receiving the prize of eternal redemption, the prize of being in heaven with
God in perfect happiness.
As
we walk amid the concerns of this earth, may we love the things of heaven, hold
fast to what truly lasts, and be ready to run and meet Jesus Christ as we
celebrate His birth at Christmas, as we prepare for His Second Coming in Glory,
and as He comes to us each day to enter our hearts and make His home there.