1st Sunday of Advent
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
It's
that time of year where we are reminded over and over again that we
must wait on the Lord. Wait for his coming among us as the Christ
Child; wait for his return as our Just Judge. If our job is to wait,
then we wait. But waiting doesn't mean Doing Nothing. What can we
do—while we wait—to grow in holiness, to grow closer to God? The
prophet Isaiah urges: “Walk in the light of the Lord!” Paul
admonishes: “Throw off the works of darkness!” And Jesus warns:
“Stay awake!” What's behind these admonishments and warnings?
Isaiah prophesies: “[The Lord] shall judge between the nations, and
impose terms on many peoples.” Paul also says in prophecy, “. .
.our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed; the night
is advanced, the day is at hand.” Jesus, pointing us toward his
return, says, “. . .you do not know on which day your Lord will
come. . .you must be prepared.” What can we do during Advent?
Throw off the works of darkness. Stay awake. And walk in the light of
the Lord. In other words, we can prepare ourselves for judgment under
Christ.
That
sounds ominous. Judgment under Christ. Scary. We've been trained by
decades of bad Catholic catechesis, by bad preaching, by Oprah and
Dr. Phil to think of judgment as a bad thing, as that sort of thing
that hateful people indulge in to make themselves feel superior.
We've been trained to avoid judgment, avoid passing sentence, avoid
drawing conclusions about the words and deeds of others. And there is
some truth in this training. Who are we to judge? We're sinners too.
None of us is worthy is bang the gavel and decide another's fate.
Fortunately, none of us will sit in the Final Judgment Seat. None of
us will weigh how ready anyone else is to live with God forever. It's
not a matter of judgment being a Bad Thing; it's simply a matter of
recognizing that the Just Judge isn't me. Or you. Or anyone else who
might pop up to claim the job. Judgment under Christ is a daily event
and a future event. Everyday someone dies and goes to their judgment.
And everyday we come one day closer to the Final Judgment. Advent is
set aside to give us some time to ponder the weight of our sins, to
think on the truth and goodness of our words and deeds. Are you
awake? Are you ready? Then throw off the works of darkness and walk
in the light of the Lord!
As
always, Paul is here to help us defy the Enemy and find the Lord. He
writes to the Romans, “Brothers and sisters. . .put on the armor of
light; let us conduct ourselves properly as in the day. . .” And
what does “properly conducting ourselves in the light of the Lord”
look like? Paul answers by telling us what ungodly conduct is. He
says, “. . .not in orgies and drunkenness, not in promiscuity and
lust, not in rivalry and jealousy.” All of these are works done IN
darkness b/c they are works OF darkness. Apparently, Christians in
Rome at this time were having trouble distinguishing btw the Works of
the Lord and Works of the Enemy. Like Christians everywhere and in
every-time, the Church in Rome needed to be reminded that one day
each of us and all of us will be presented to the Just Judge for
judgment. If we have spent our redeemed lives avoiding the Light and
wallowing in the Dark, then the Just Judge will honor our commitment
to the Dark and allow us to dwell forever among our preferred
company—those who chose to live outside the grace of his Father.
Thus Paul admonishes us “put on the armor of light” so that the
works of darkness can be clearly seen and defeated.
But
he goes even further, writing, “. . .put on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and make no provision for the desires of the flesh.” Put
on Jesus Christ, which we did at baptism, and no make no provision
for the flesh, which is what we do—or don't do—when we walk in
the light; that is, we don't plan to sin, or we don't set things up
just in case we decide to sin. We could think of this as “avoiding
occasions of sin,” but that's too weak. What Paul is saying here is
much stronger: get out of your life all provisions—all supplies,
all plans, all contingencies—that allow you to fall back into
indulging the flesh sinfully. Here's another way to think about this:
if you decide to go on a diet, you don't stock up on Fritos and ice
cream the day before you plan to begin. If you decide to stop
smoking, you don't go out and buy a carton of cigarettes. . .just in
case. Your intentions going in matter to your success. If you “make
provision” for failure, then failure will follow you until it
catches you. By “putting on Christ” you arm yourself with more
than you own good intentions, you bring to the fight against sin the
strongest ally you can possibly get. With the Final Judgment looming,
who better to fight on your side than the Just Judge himself? The one
who died for you in the first place!
As
we start this Advent season, it's a good idea to remember the Good
News Christ came to deliver, the Good News that Christ is coming to
deliver: we are no longer slaves to sin. There was a time when
we could not not sin. It was our nature to be disobedient. But
b/c Christ died as one of us, rose again from the tomb, and ascended
with our human nature to sit at the right hand of the Father, we are
free from disobedience. Our way back to God is open, our path to Him
is clear. There is nothing btw us and God but our own will to be
free. The Final Judgment of Christ isn't a threat; it's not a scare
tactic wielded by an angry god to frighten us into compliance. In
fact, the Final Judgment is a promise of mercy. Who sits in judgment?
The one who died for us on the cross. Knowing that Christ sits in the
Judgment Seat, knowing that he is the one who will weigh our love
against our apathy should thrill us! What might frighten us just a
little is the hard truth that nothing is hidden from him, nothing is
left in the darkness when his divine light is shone on the human
soul. Thus we hear again and again in scripture: “Stay awake! Be on
guard! Stand ready!” Any moment, every moment could be the moment
when we are called to account for a lifetime.
For
the next few weeks, we wait on the Lord. We will wait for his arrival
as the Christ Child at Christmas. And we will wait for his coming
again as the Just Judge. The mystery of faith reveals that the coming
of Christ as a child and his coming again as a judge are the same
event. Though separated in time, these two historical events are
eternally identical; that is, from all eternity, outside
history/outside time, our redemption through Christ and our final
judgment by Christ are accomplished simultaneously. At the moment of
his birth, we are judged forgiven. The question for us is: do I
receive his mercy and live accordingly; or do I reject his mercy and
live as if he were never born? Advent is our special chance to live
according to the just judgment of the one who died to free us from
sin. With his birth less than a month away, we have the chance to put
his judgment ahead of us, to locate it on a particular day and live
toward that day, knowing that it is coming soon. Between now and
then, Christ urges us to remember the Good News he came to deliver.
He urges us to recall again that we are the beloved children of his
Father. We are forgiven. All is forgiven. What we must do is receive
His mercy and live as children of the light.
__________________
Hey! You got something written! I really liked the final paragraph, though I had to think for a bit to try to figure out what you meant by: "The mystery of faith reveals that the coming of Christ as a child and his coming again as a judge are the same event." Overall, there were several areas that had a "rushed" quality - interspersed with some excellent bits. I appreciated what you said and thought there were many excellent points, but wanted more cohesion and more adherence to one "tone" throughout.
ReplyDeleteYea. Something. RE: last para. . .when I'm desperate, I get abstract. The idea is that all of God's activity (from His perspective) is simultaneous. For ours, of course, His actions are historically progressive, i.e. progressing through history. My point (I think) is that Advent is both a time to wait on the birth of Christ and a time to wait for the Second Coming. In history, these are two different historical events. However, theologically, they are the same event.
DeleteThanks - that's what I figured you meant.
DeleteThis was certainly not your best homily, but not your worst either. I don't think it's as bad as you think it is. You didn't have any 5yr olds piping up with corrections while you were preaching, did you?
I left a comment on your previous post before reading this one. I try to work through my feed in chronological order. Just wanted to say that I loved this part: "The Final Judgment of Christ isn't a threat; it's not a scare tactic wielded by an angry god to frighten us into compliance. In fact, the Final Judgment is a promise of mercy. Who sits in judgment? The one who died for us on the cross. Knowing that Christ sits in the Judgment Seat, knowing that he is the one who will weigh our love against our apathy should thrill us!"
ReplyDelete