19 December 2024

Birth and return

3rd Week of Advent (W)

Fr. Philip Neri Powell OP
St. Albert the Great, Irving


During our monthly lector's meeting last night, the friars discussed two articles about the physical and spiritual effects of social media on the brain. To boil it down: social media leaves us reactive and isolated. “Reactive” in that we come to expect a “frictionless achievement of gratification” by sacrificing depth of knowledge for superficial information. And “isolated” in that we sacrifice real person-to-person relationships with “transitory and stylized transactions severed from...belonging.” IOW, social media leaves us anxious and frustrated with the day-today realities of just getting along with other embodied souls. If we struggle to just “get along,” how much more difficult – if not impossible – is it to actually love one another in a culture founded on digital ephemera? Advent is all about waiting on the birth of the Christ Child and the return of the Just Judge. The key words here being birth and return. Coming into the world through another person and coming back into the world as a person. The Real World of Real People, Places, and Things. Not the pixelated imaginary of two-dimensional space. Jesus was conceived, born, lived, and died. He is Emmanuel, God-is-with-us.

Matthew gives us Jesus' genealogy. He has a long family history. 42 generations. He has distant relatives with names and histories of their own. He was born in a real place. To a real woman. Who is betrothed to a real man. And all of this is prophesied by Isaiah 800 years before the Nativity. The early Church fought against an army of heresies that denied the reality of Jesus' humanity. For close to 500 years we weren't convinced that Jesus was a real person – flesh and bone and blood. And even after we settled on an orthodox Christology, vast segments of the Church held tightly – for another 500 yrs. – to the error that Jesus couldn't really be “like us in all things but sin.” Or that he was exactly like us – a creature of the Father. This might all seem like an academic exercise best left for the classroom, but how we understand the person of Christ grounds how we understand ourselves as persons who are becoming Christs. If Christ was just a god, then there's no hope for us. We are not gods. But if he's just a man, then we are perfect as we are being merely human. Advent teaches us to wait for the birth of God-is-with-us. Emmanuel.

And if God-is-with-us, then we are with one another in Him. Never alone. Never isolated. Our prayer, our worship is never “transitory and stylized transactions severed from...belonging.” And the wisdom we inherit from our ancestors in faith is never just the “frictionless achievement of gratification.” We do not and cannot surrender deep knowledge of God for superficial information about God. Advent teaches us that remaking ourselves in the image of what we ourselves have made is the stupidest form of idolatry. Christ is born. And he will return. Until he does, he is with us.



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