Sunday, December 13, 2015

God clothes us with joy – Zeph 3:14-18a, Phil 4:4-7

Advent, Yr C, Week 3; Notre Dame (FOG Graduate Student chapel)

We all like to be praised.  As humans, we have widely varying tastes and preferences in oh-so-many things, but being praised is almost universally liked, I think.  Sometimes being praised is utilitarian, a good grade, or letter of recommendation, or positive feedback from a reviewer: there, sometimes, the pleasure at the praise is really pleasure at what we can use the praise to do.  But there’s a deeper type of pleasure at being praised, a holier one, even, and that’s when we know that the praise comes from someone being really overjoyed because of us, and we rejoice in response not because the person’s important, but because we love them, and stimulating joy in someone we love is wonderful. 

Well, the prophet Zephaniah dreams of a day when God will rejoice over us, and his dream is prophetic: it speaks forth something deeply true.  He pictures God so joyful over us that He sings out with joy, as at a festival.  And he says that that joy, God’s joy, will renew us in our love.  God doesn’t rejoice because we’ve got this loving-people business down pat, he rejoices, because it’s only in His joy that our love can be strengthened to the point that we can love like Him.

Because joy is contagious.  So is hatred and fear, but God has acted definitively in Christ to break that cycle, as Jesus shows us a love so great that not even death, death at our hands, could keep him from being with us.  That’s a wonder Paul so marveled at, that he could write such exhortations as “Rejoice in the Lord always!” even in the midst of great suffering.  He’s writing this letter to the Philippians from prison, and while incarceration in the Roman Empire varied from place to place, we can reconstruct with some probability what that meant: it meant no sun light; it meant no heat if this was a winter’s night, no form of cooling if it was a summer’s day; it meant no way of getting rid of sewage; it meant regular beatings; it meant witnessing suicide and spontaneous executions and knowing you could be next.  But, from prison, Paul writes the most joyful letter we have from him.

That doesn’t make sense.  It doesn’t make sense and that’s the point, because love isn’t meant to make sense.  Love is meant to make joy, and that’s totally different.  Think of the folly of pulling totally useless plants out of the ground and presenting them to someone.  At times, being joyful is as ridiculous as giving a loved one flowers.  Just as ridiculous; just as lovely.

Pope Francis named his first apostolic exhortation “The Gospel of Joy” and had this to say:

“I realize of course that joy is not expressed the same way at all times in life, especially at moments of great difficulty.  Joy adapts and changes, but it always endures, even as a flicker of light born of our personal certainty that, when everything is said and done, we are infinitely loved.  I understand the grief of people who have to endure great suffering, yet slowly and surely we all have to let the joy of faith slowly revive as a quiet yet firm trust… I can say that the most beautiful and natural expressions of joy which I have seen in my life were in poor people who had little to hold on to.  I also think of the real joy shown by others who, even amid pressing professional obligations, were able to preserve, in detachment and simplicity, a heart full of faith.  In their own way, all these instances of joy flow from the infinite love of God, who has revealed himself to us in Jesus Christ.”

That’s what grounds our Advent joy: that love, and that contagious divine joy.  Because the joy of being alert to that presence leads to the realization that our everyday life can, and in fact must, become a prayer.  That we can, as Paul put it, entrust all our needs to God in prayer, with thanksgiving.  And we can give thanks in all circumstances, not for all circumstances, but because we can learn to see God’s hand at work.

Our world tries to teach us a script of pessimism and cynicism, but the Spirit has a better script for us.  Joy, prayer and gratitude are the tools we use to rewrite our script.  Every night before bed, I try to look back at my day with three words: thank you, sorry and wow.  The words train me in spotting what I have to be grateful for, where I have failed to make my life a prayer, and how I have been amazed and delighted throughout the day.  Then, I look forward to the next day, with one word: please.  I know that tomorrow will have its own woes, mine or those of people I’m called to be there for, and I stand in need of gift to get through tomorrow, to make it prayer.

Those four words, that make up what’s called the prayer of Examen, train us to see God’s joy.  They train us to see that God has washed us and clothed us with his own Spirit, and the Spirit gives us our joy, our gratitude, our prayer. 


I’m wearing rose tonight to literally be clothed in joy for an hour.  We are all really, spiritually clothed in a far greater joy throughout our lives.  Gaudete!

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