NB. Re-posting this 2005 homily b/c it uses one of my fav phrases. . .
2nd Week of Advent 2005 (Fri)
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Church of the Incarnation, University of Dallas
 
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Church of the Incarnation, University of Dallas
Not
 a flattering picture, is it?  Jesus compares his generation to fickle 
children trying to entertain one another in the marketplace:  they play 
joyful music and no one dances, mournful music and no one cries.  They 
complain bitterly to one another because the entertainment is ignored, 
unappreciated.  You can almost see their energetic boredom, their 
restless hunger to be amused, diverted—show us something fun, something 
wild and crazy!  Their attention owned by the flashiest sight, the 
loudest noise, the most daring stunt.  They are a generation of 
vacillating thrill seekers, a generation given over to the inconsistency
 of their passion for the next bright-shiny thing, the next pretty 
novelty, the next whatever it is that they haven’t seen before.
Jesus
 is worried that his generation lacks wisdom, that there is a spirit of 
folly animating those who watch him and expect to be entertained, those 
who follow him but do so only to see a show.   This fickleness is a sign
 that an abiding wisdom eludes them, that they have sold themselves to 
the arena, the theater of foolishness, and squander their lives on the 
silliness of spectacle.
This fickle 
generation rejects John because of his asceticism—no eating, no 
drinking—and they reject Jesus because of his generosity—a friend of tax
 collectors and sinners.  Every face of redemption shown them, they 
reject.  Every opportunity given to them to come to wisdom seems somehow
 wrong, not quite to their taste.  Jesus’ frustration with their folly 
is clear in his irritated tone: “But wisdom is vindicated by her works.”
Of
 course, Jesus’ vision is broader than one generation.  No doubt he is 
looking forward and watching generation after generation fall into the 
same temptation to pull wisdom down from the altar and replace it with 
foolish novelties, silly entertainments.  Is there a generation that 
hasn’t done this?  Has there been a time in the Church when we weren’t 
distracted by the empty promises of the Lie and our attention taken away
 from the Word?  Probably not.  But I think we’ve gotten a lot better at
 distilling the silliness into more intense moments of fleeting 
sensation, much better at staging the drama—the tragedies and the 
comedies—of our hungry lives into bigger, brighter, better funded orgies
 of spiritually useless consumption. 
Our
 way out, of course, is Jesus—to be true followers, to get in behind him
 and walk his path, his narrow way, to our perfection in holiness.  
Isaiah preaches to us, prophesies for us that it is the Lord, our God, 
who will teach us what is good and who will lead us on the way we should
 go.  He promises prosperity and vindication, great success and 
justification, if we will listen to the Lord’s will for us, pay 
attention to His plan for us and follow Him.  God’s wisdom for us will 
be justified in the works He does for us, with us, and through us.
John’s
 penitential austerity and Jesus extravagant love, the precursor and the
 consummation of our salvation, demands a more focused attention, a 
weightier commitment than all the spiritual entertainments of this 
generation:  New Age non-sense, self-help psychobabble, 
do-it-my-way-Catholicism, and the cult of narcissistic, material  
acquisition.  What feeds us, fills us finally, is the Lord’s feast of 
wisdom, His party of eternal goods laid out for us, given to us to 
satisfy that gnawing hunger, that deep rumbling of need that pushes us 
toward the easy fill, the quick snack.
Who, but a fool, eats the Happy Meal when the All-You-Can-Eat buffet of the Lord is right here, free of charge?
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