Sunday, December 6, 2015

The Word of God comes to us – Luke 3:1-6, Bar 5:1-9

Advent, Yr C, Wk 2; Notre Dame (Walsh Hall)

We love stories about journeys.  Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, the Odyssey, The Earthsea books, the Wizard of Oz, Watership Down.  Some people even claim that every great story is at its heart the story of a journey (they’re wrong, but lots of people say it anyway…).  Whether they’re hobbits, women, girls, men or rabbits, we do love stories about plucky, beyond-all-odds heroes traversing through all kinds of sticky situations, normally to make it home, a better person for it.  I have a friend who just put in an audition tape for American Ninja Warrior, and it’s amazing how many people (including me) will spend hours of our lives watching people attempt that same short but grueling journey, in the hope that one of them might make it to the top of Mount Midoriyama.  We love these stories, I think, because we love to imagine ourselves on a journey, to narrativize our lives like that.  In fact, it’s a classic spiritual practice.  You can read books about the soul’s journey to God by saints like St. Bonaventure, and more recent spiritual writers, including our own Fr. John Dunne, a Holy Cross priest who taught at Notre Dame for 55 years.




Seeing our life as a journey is classic, and I’m not trying to knock it as a story, but it’s not the only story, and it’s not the Christmas story.  It’s not what we find in today’s gospel.  Today’s gospel isn’t about our journey, or even about John the Baptist’s journey.  It’s certainly not about the journey of Pontius Pilate, the ruthless governor who approved Jesus’ legal murder, or Herod, who built a capital for himself atop an ancient graveyard, of Tiberius who kicked the Jews out of Rome.  No, we hear in our gospel that the Word of God came to John, son of Zechariah in the desert.  The Word of God came.  The Word of God journeyed.  John didn’t go on some quest to find it; the Word of God came.  John didn’t eat enough locusts and wear enough camel hair to somehow deserve it; the Word of God came.

The prophetic quote that Luke gives us isn’t our instructions; it’s an echo of the angelic work orders, as the master builder barks out instructions to the heavenly host who work together to straighten paths, level mountains and fill in valleys to build that royal road with one aim: that the Word of God can come.

That’s what this part of Advent is for: remembering that that’s happened.  And remembering that we don’t need to make Christmas happen.  God’s done that.  The Word of God came, and the Word of God comes.  We’ve got a lot of work to do over the next three weeks, I’m sure.  There’s the small matter of papers to finish, exams to prepare for and maybe some applications to submit; there’s travel, there’s shopping and wrapping and decorating and cooking.  But we don’t need to make Christmas happen.  God’s done that.

The Word of God came, and the Word of God comes.  God’s Word enters our lives powerfully when we hear scripture proclaimed at Mass, when we proclaim it or sing, when we read it, when we recall a powerful verse in a moment of weakness, when we enact with our lives.  And it makes a difference. 

You hear a lot of people talking about searching for God, and I know what they mean by that, God’s presence can certainly be hard to discern in a world that can be cold and scary, but the image discomforts me.  Searching for God is searching for air.  If we weren’t immersed in it, we wouldn’t be able to search at all.  We don’t need to search for God as much as we need to stop and marvel at the wonder that the Word of God came, and be excited to holiness at what a difference that makes.

It launched John the Baptist on his preaching circuit around the region of the Jordan, calling other people to this baptism of repentance, responding God’s presence but having all the sin washed away that clogs up our throats and makes it harder to breath the air that God is.  In our reading from Baruch, we hear of the Lord’s presence leading Jerusalem to cast off the sack cloth she’s robed herself in and receive from God garments of beauty and honor and glory.  That’s how we prepare for Christmas, and how we prepare for Christ’s eventual second coming: not by searching for God, but by growing in our amazement that he’s come, and shedding all that tries to keep him at bay.  He’s leveled mountains and raised valleys to get to us, but he’s too gentle with us to pull away a sin that we still want to cling to. 


And in a way, that can be its own journey, the journey of repentance, of opening ourselves up to the mercy of God that surrounds us.  And that’s why Pope Francis this week opens the Year of Mercy, the year to remind us that God stands waiting all that still separates us.  As we prepare for Christmas in so many other ways, I’d encourage you to think about making a sacramental confession this Advent, especially if you’ve been away a while. It’s amazing what glory you might end up clothed with.

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