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The
Voice, the Word, and Our Conversion
December 9, 2007
Readings for the Second
Sunday of Advent
| Reading
1: Is. 11:1–10 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 72:1–2, 7–8, 12–13, 17 |
| Reading
2: Rom. 15:4–9 |
| Gospel:
Mt. 3:1–12 |
| Link
to Readings |
By
Father Roger J. Landry
On the
second Sunday of Advent each year, the Church leads us on
pilgrimage to the Jordan River, so that we might enroll in
the school of St. John the Baptist, hear his message, and
put it into action in our lives. At first glance, it seems
like a strange choice to meet him at the Jordan, 30 years
AFTER Christ’s birth, millennia BEFORE His Second Coming.
But the reason why the Church always visits John at the Jordan
is because he was the one chosen by God the Father from all
eternity to get His people ready to receive His Son, who was
already walking toward the Jordan River to inaugurate His
public ministry.
Advent
literally means “coming toward,” and in it we
ourselves are called to prepare for God’s coming toward
us—in the past, 2000 years ago in Bethlehem; in the
future, with power and great glory on the clouds of heaven;
and in the present, in His Word, in the Eucharist, and in
grace. The preparatory work announced by John is the way we’re
called to get ourselves ready to receive the Lord who is coming.
What is that work?
When we
meet him at the Jordan, John blares, “I am the voice
of one crying out in the desert.” He didn’t say,
“I am one crying out in the desert,” but rather,
“I am the VOICE of one crying out in the desert.”
John is the voice, the loudspeaker, the spokesperson; who
is the “one crying out?” It’s the WORD,
Christ Jesus Himself. John’s message is God’s
message, which John was screaming at the top of his powerful
lungs. The message was urgent and clear: “Prepare the
way of the Lord, make his paths straight.”
Under
Construction
In the
ancient world, the roads were a mess. Every time there was
a battle, the roads would be attacked and bridges destroyed,
to try to stop the advance of the enemy. The weather took
its toll as well, leading to all types of serious potholes
and other obstacles. Any time a dignitary would be coming,
they would have either to fix the roads or build new ones
so that the rolling caravan accompanying him could arrive
without delay and without hassle.
John the
Baptist is telling us that to get ready for the Lord who is
coming this Advent, we, too, need to prepare a way for Him.
We, too, need to make straight the paths. In the ancient world,
preparing such a path meant a great deal of manual work, making
crooked paths straight, rough ways smooth, and even charting
paths through the mountains and valleys. For us, that pathway
will not be traced on the ground, but in of our hearts. It
will not be made in the wilderness, but in our life. The work
is not something that will make our hands dirty, but our souls
clean. What John the Baptist is calling us to is CONVERSION.
To preach
conversion is the mission of the Baptist, which is why we
encounter him every Advent, because in Advent this message
must be preached and conversion must be practiced. The reason
is because Jesus has come into the world to SAVE US FROM OUR
SINS and from what our sins lead to, death. In order for us
to appreciate our Savior and what He did for us, we have to
realize that we are sinners who need Him to save us from our
sins. That’s why John the Baptist’s message is
such a gift. His whole vocation, his whole mission, was to
deliver that message.
Before
John was even conceived, the Archangel Gabriel said to his
father, Zechariah, “He will TURN THE HEARTS of many
of the people of Israel to the Lord their God. With the spirit
and power of Elijah, he will go before the Lord, to turn .
. . the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous, to make
ready a people prepared for the Lord” (Lk. 1:16–17).
Nine months later at his birth, Zechariah exclaimed, “You,
my child, will be called the prophet of the Most High; for
you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, to give his
people knowledge of salvation BY THE FORGIVENESS OF THEIR
SINS” (Lk. 1:76–77).
When the
Baptist arrived at the Jordan, he fulfilled those prophecies,
“proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness
of their sins” (Mk. 1:4). His first words at the Jordan
were “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”
Those were the identical words that Jesus himself would use
to inaugurate His public ministry a little later, after His
forty day retreat in the desert: “Repent, for the Kingdom
of heaven has come near” (Mt. 4:17). Thus, John was
indeed the VOICE of JESUS crying out in the desert for “repentance”
through the forgiveness of our sins. That VOICE and that WORD
continue to echo LIVE today.
Heading
for the Promised Land
The Lord
is coming for us in Advent, but for Him to reach His destination,
we have to convert. “To make straight the paths of the
Lord” means to clear the path of sin, which is the major
obstacle for the Lord to come into our lives. Quoting the
prophet Isaiah, John the Baptist says, “Every valley
shall be filled, and every mountain and hill shall be made
low, and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough
ways made smooth” (Lk. 3:5).
We have
to call those topographical formations by their proper names.
We have to make low the mountains of our pride and egocentrism.
We have to fill in the valleys that come from a shallow prayer
life and a minimalistic way of living our faith. We have to
straighten out whatever crooked paths we’ve been walking:
If we’ve been involved in some secret sins or in a sinful
relationship, the Lord calls us through John the Baptist to
end it; if we’ve been involved in some dishonest practices
at work or at home, we’re called to straighten them
out and do restitution; if we’ve been harboring grudges
or hatred, or failing to reconcile with others, now’s
the time to clear away all the debris; and if we’ve
been pushing God off the side of the road, if we’ve
been saying to Him that we don’t really have the time
for Him, now’s the time to get our priorities straight.
This Advent—which is a gift of the Lord to us, and (who
knows?) may be our last—will SUCCEED OR FAIL on the
basis of how well we convert and clear our lives of sin so
that the Lord may come to us.
There’s
a reason why John the Baptist preached at the Jordan River.
It was more than just a source of water where he could baptize.
The Jordan River was the place that represented the border
between the desert—where the Jews wandered aimlessly
for 38 years after centuries of slavery in Egypt—and
the Promised Land. By preaching his message there, John was
inviting the Jews of his day to come out of the bondage of
slavery, to leave their faults and wandering, sinful lives
behind, and to enter into the promised land full of God’s
blessings. The Baptist preaches the same thing to us today.
He points us to a new exodus—from death to life, from
sin to sanctity—and states very clearly that the path
from the desert into the new promised land IS CONVERSION.
In
Repair
In order
to make that conversion possible, Jesus, on Easter Sunday
evening, instituted the Sacrament of Confession and sent priests
out to the end of the world not just to “preach repentance
and forgiveness of sins . . . to all nations beginning from
Jerusalem” (Lk. 24:47), but with the POWER to EFFECT
that forgiveness of sins: “Receive the Holy Spirit:
Those whose sins you forgive are forgiven; those whose sins
you retain are retained” (Jn. 20:18–22). The saints
have called this sacrament a “second baptism,”
in which we’re brought back to the Jordan and cleansed
interiorly like on the day of our Christening.
The same
Christ who, through His priests gives you His Body and Blood,
through the same priests gives you His forgiveness. As Catholics,
we’re called to love all seven sacraments and take advantage
of them, trusting that if the Lord instituted them, we need
them. In the Sacrament of Confession, the Lord wants to heal
you and help you repair the damage caused by sin to the path
between you and Him. Please take Him up on His offer.
In today’s
Gospel, John the Baptist wants every one of us to know that
we NEED THAT FORGIVENESS. We ALL need to repent. The Scribes
and the Pharisees thought they were exceptions to John’s
call for conversion. They were going out to the Jordan to
hear John, who had become quite a phenomenon, but they were
not really open to personal repentance. They thought they
didn’t need it. The Baptist exposed their hypocrisy
in unmitigated candor: “You brood of vipers! Who warned
you to flee from the wrath to come? Bear fruit worthy of repentance.
Do not presume to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham
as our ancestor’; for I tell you, God is able from these
stones to raise up children to Abraham. Even now the ax is
lying at the root of the trees; every tree therefore that
does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.”
“Who
Takes Away the Sins of the World!”
Sometimes
we, like the Scribes and the Pharisees, can have a similar
blindness to our own sins and fail to see the urgent need
for repentance. We can say, “We are children of God.
. . . God loves us unconditionally, just as we are. . . .
We don’t really need to change.” The Baptist reminds
us that God can raise up children of God from rocks and that
we shouldn’t let our Christian dignity become an excuse
for us not to realize that we have to strive, always, to live
up to that dignity, to become truly the likeness of God, who
is “holy, holy, holy.” He tells us that we need
to “bear fruit worthy of repentance.”
We can’t
stay, therefore, at the level of a “general repentance,”
recognizing that we “like everybody else” have
our faults and failings, without doing anything about it.
If we truly are repentant, that must show itself in actions—in
“fruit”—and the fruit of repentance that
God wants most is for us humbly to examine our consciences,
come with sorrow to confess our sins to Him through the priest,
make a sincere attempt to amend our lives, and receive His
forgiveness in the way He himself established.
John the
Baptist’s mission was not merely to announce the need
for repentance, but to point out how sins would be forgiven.
He told the people, “Behold one who is more powerful
than I is coming after me; I am not worthy to carry his sandals.”
A short time later, he saw that “more powerful one”
coming to him at the Jordan and exclaimed, “Behold the
Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world” (Jn.
1:29). If John were physically present here today, dressed
in camel hair and his leather belt, he would say to us, “Behold
the One of whom I was speaking! Behold the Lamb of God, who
comes to take away your sins and the sins of the world”
and his hands would point to Christ’s presence in the
confessional through His priests. That’s where the Lamb
of God takes away our sins, the sins for which He paid such
a precious price on Calvary.
The Lamb
of God is coming toward us to take away our sins. That is
why this message of the Baptist is such “Good News”
and not bad news. We’re sinners, yes, but God comes
to save us from those sins, if we repent and allow Him to
do so. This is the best way for us to prepare for His coming
in the past in Bethlehem. This is the best way for us to prepare
for His coming at the end of time or at the end of “our
time,” whichever comes first. This is the best way for
us to prepare to receive him in the Eucharist. As we will
sing in just a few minutes,
On Jordan’s
bank the Baptist’s cry
Announces that the Lord is nigh.
Awake and hearken for he brings
Glad tidings from the King of Kings.
Then
cleansed be every soul from sin,
Make straight the way of God within.
Prepare we in our hearts a home,
Where such a mighty guest may come.
Father
Roger J. Landry is pastor
of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in New Bedford, MA and Executive
Editor of The Anchor, the weekly newspaper of the
Diocese of Fall River. An archive of his homilies and articles
is found at catholicpreaching.com.
This
is adapted from one of Fr. Landry’s recent homilies.
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