NB. from 2012. . .visiting The Squirrels until after Christmas.
4th Sunday of Advent
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
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4th Sunday of Advent
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
Through his prophet, Micah, the Lord God promises, “. . .from you 
[Bethlehem] shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel. . 
.He shall stand firm and shepherd his flock by the strength of the LORD.
 . .he shall be peace.” This promise was made almost 800 years before 
the birth of the Christ Child in Bethlehem. Between the making of this 
promise and the birth of Christ, eighteen generations of God's people 
waited and waited and waited for its fulfillment. And when the Lord God 
placed His only-begotten Son in the virginal womb of a teenaged Mary, 
and she bore him into the world as a squalling baby in a barn, who could
 blame God's people for their disappointment and their turning away to 
wait some more? Rulers are born to kings and queens. Strength comes from
 wealth. Peace is settled with a sword. Babies born to working class 
bumpkins from the sticks do not grow up to rule God's people. And so, 
the waiting continues. For those of us who see in the Christ Child a 
ruler of strength and peace, the wait is almost over. Just two days and 
our wait is over. Blessed are those who believe that what is spoken to 
them by the Lord will be fulfilled. Blessed are those who wait upon the 
Lord. 
Speaking strictly for myself, patience is not a virtue; it's more like a
 penance, a trial, or even a punishment. Being patient requires a level 
of “letting go” that I find extraordinarily difficult to master. Over 
the years, I've gotten better at enduring the obvious flaws of others. 
No one's perfect after all. Me included. But, of course, my own flaws 
never inconvenience anyone else. The truest test of patience ever 
invented by the Devil is called “Driving in New Orleans.” Second to this
 test is the one called “Parking in New Orleans.” Either one of these 
tests alone would wear a hole in the patience of the Virgin herself and 
both of them together would likely cause Jesus to return in the 
Apocalypse earlier than planned. Fortunately, for the sake of my 
holiness and humility, I am tested often enough to notice that patience 
in waiting can—sometimes—actually be virtue: the good habit of letting 
go and waiting upon the Lord. If Lent is that time before Easter when we
 are consigned to wait upon the Lord's resurrection, then Advent is our 
time to wait upon his birth. As Christians, our waiting is not polluted 
by impatience. We know he is coming. Rather, our patient waiting is 
flavored by anticipation. 
Blessed are those who believe that what is spoken to them by the Lord 
will be fulfilled.
 What has the Lord spoken to us? What word of His do we believe will be 
fulfilled? Through His prophet, Micah, He says, “. . .from you 
[Bethlehem] shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel. . 
.He shall stand firm and shepherd his flock by the strength of the Lord.
 . .he shall be peace.” He also says through Micah, “. . .the Lord will 
give [Israel] up, until the time when she who is to give birth has 
borne. . .” The time between the delivery of this prophecy and its 
fulfillment in the delivery of the Christ Child by Mary is the Advent of
 Israel, that long season of waiting between hearing the good news of a 
future Messiah and his arrival among us. Eight hundred years of 
anticipation, eight hundred years of waiting and waiting. If hopeful 
anticipation spices the main event, then the birth of Christ was 
well-seasoned! However, we know that his arrival—his humble start—was a 
disappointment to most of those who had patiently stood by. Perhaps they
 had forgotten the last sentence of what the Lord had said to Micah 
about the coming of the Messiah, “He shall be peace.” What sort of king 
comes to deliver his people from oppression using a sword of peace? 
God's people waited for eight hundred years for the coming of the 
promised Messiah. Some—those who do not follow the Christ—wait still. 
And even though the Messiah has been born to the virgin as prophesied, 
and even though we who follow Christ no long wait for his arrival in 
history, we still wait for the advent of his universal peace. We don't 
need a recitation of recent global and domestic events to know that we 
are far from the peace promised by the birth of the Savior. If anything,
 violence and death seem to be taking the upper hand. It is not too much
 for us ask: how much more strain can civilization bear before it cracks
 and falls apart? When we ask questions like this, and when we expect 
answers in concrete terms (days, weeks, months), we tend to forget that 
as followers of the Prince of Peace our hope, the fulfillment of God's 
promise of peace, is not to be found on a watch or a calendar. It's not 
found in the workings of the State, the laboratory, the classroom, or 
the battlefield. Our hope, the fulfillment of God's promise of peace, 
rests solely in the kingdom Christ brought with him to that barn in 
Bethlehem, the same kingdom he will bring to completion when he comes 
again. “He shall be peace,” and he is our peace until he comes again.
There's an obvious danger to this way of thinking. If we are simply 
waiting for the universal peace of Christ to arrive when he comes again,
 then we can be sorely tempted to adopt a “do-nothing” quietism; that 
is, we are poked and prodded by the sheer overwhelming horror of 
violence and death to stand aside and gamble our lives away on the 
off-chance that God will “do something” about this mess. So often we 
hear people ask after a disaster, “Where was God?” The assumption being 
that if God really existed or really cared, none of this horrible stuff 
would've happened. We waited on your help, Lord, and you never showed. 
Perhaps the most frustrating part of being a follower of Christ is 
knowing that help for our world is coming but that it did not arrive in 
time. Of course, help did arrive in time. He arrived 2,000 years ago as a
 child born in a barn. What we are waiting on now is our own growth in 
holiness, our own progress toward the righteousness that he made 
possible by his death and resurrection. If we want peace now, if we want
 help now, then we must be that help and that peace in his name. We 
cannot be both freed from our fallen nature by grace AND free from the 
consequences of that fallen nature. If we will be free to follow him in 
peace, then in peace we must follow His will and word. 
Just two days and our wait is over. Blessed are those who believe that 
what is spoken to them by the Lord will be fulfilled. Blessed are those 
who wait with anticipation upon the Lord. Elizabeth blesses Mary b/c 
Mary believed Gabriel's word to her. She says Yes to being the Mother of
 the Christ Child and comes down to us in the faith as the Blessed 
Virgin Mary. For an example of humility and peace, we need to look no 
further than the fervor with which this teenaged girl freely accepted 
the harrowing mission of bearing the Word made flesh into the world. As a
 good Jewish woman, Mary knows words of the prophets. She knows who it 
is she is carrying in her womb. She runs to Elizabeth in haste to greet 
her cousin, and all of her hopes are fulfilled when Elizabeth says, 
“Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb.” 
With the birth of Christ 2,000 yrs ago and with our celebration of his 
Nativity in two days time, we too are blessed. We have seen the glory of
 God in the face of a child and what we saw there has freed us to await 
the coming of his peace. 
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