"It is now the hour for you to wake
from sleep, for our salvation is closer than when we first came to believe
" St Paul told the Romans
NOW is the hour - for salvation is
closer than you think - this is the spirit of Advent.
There is a tension in Advent between
waiting, alert and joyful and our journeying in confidant trust towards the
Lord's second coming.
At Advent we look backward at the joy of
the nativity when God becomes man - humble and gentle - born of a virgin and we
look forward to our Lord's coming again in majesty and glory to judge the
living and the dead.
Throughout These last couple of weeks we
have been called, reminded and prodded by the Spirit of Advent; the first
Sunday of Advent, was a wake up to the call to God' judgement that will come,
the 2nd Sunday we were called to live authentic lives and to make the crooked
straight within ourselves and in those we touch in preparation of the coming of
the Lord,
and last week there was the joyful
confession in he who is coming to baptize not with water for the repentance of
sin, but with the Holy Spirit to bring about new life of faith.
And today we are reminded that nothing
is impossible for God and we are shown the model of humility and trust in
Mary's surrendering to the impossible in her yes to God. Advent isn't just another passing season.
In the first reading king David thought
he had a plausible plan.
- to build an appropriate house ( a
temple) for God.
This was a good and noble plan but it
wasn't God's plan.
God's plan was bigger and grander than
anything King David could even imagine.
What would be impossible for David to
build in stone was surly possible for God to create in the womb of a virgin.
God, through Nathan the prophet,
reminded David that he began his life a shepherd of his father's flock.
God tells David not to bother with
building him a house (for who can house God?).
Build your people up instead, love them
and care for them as a good shepherd of my flock.
Do this and your kingdom will last for
ever.
David's kingdom, a sign of God's
kingdom, will last beyond brick and mortar, for it is never what we build of
stone that lasts.
We know that David's historical
undivided kingdom did not last beyond his grandson.
The kingdom God speaks of crosses the
boundaries of time and place and extends to the ends of the earth as well as
the end of time itself.
In the second reading Paul describes the
extent of this new impossible kingdom as "being made known to all
nations" and it will be achieved only - through faith in, him who can
strengthen you, Jesus Christ.
In today's gospel reading we see how God
will go about this grand enterprise of salvation.
God's messenger the glorious and sublime
angel Gabriel reveals to a young, betrothed virgin, the shape of the plan. It
is a story of angelic majesty meeting human humility.
"Hail, full of Grace" is
Gabriel's greeting to Mary. Clearly, she
is already blessed by her chosen-ness, her immaculate conception and sinless
life and she will be further blessed by what is to come.
"The Lord is with you" emphasis that Mary has been chosen to be the
Lord's instrument and his bearer.
Now this is all too much, to
overwhelming for a young girl to get her head around.
"Do not be afraid" Gabriel
comforts a uneasy Mary.
This is a promise that only goodness, beyond
understanding, comes from the Lord.
Gabriel goes on to reveal to Mary the
impossible future.
You (he tells her) will be the mother of
the redeemed and the redeemer!
You will conceive a child - Emmanuel
(God with us). You will call him Jesus,
But the world (some day) will call him
Son of God and he will rule over God's kingdom
comprising of all nations in faith and he will rule this kingdom
forever.
The shear force and magnitude of this
revelation must of weighed heavily on
Mary
and she asks Gabriel how this can be.
Gabriel says - God will do this, for
nothing is impossible for God.
He will do this through the Holy Spirit
who will overshadow you. Which means the Holy Spirit will consume completely
and changes her and we must remember that Mary was overshadowed not just at
divine conception, but for her whole life. Through all the joys, the anxieties,
even through suffering and sorrow Mary was always full of God's overshadowing
Grace, which is fully realized at her assumption into heaven.
Mary's response to the impossible,
changed the world and inspires us down to our very day by its humble and
trusting acceptance of God's will.
"May it be done according to your
word", she tells Gabriel.
This acceptance doesn't come from
understanding or reason.
Mary hasn't figured it out. She doesn't
get it. She surrenders to the
unreasonable, the mystery of God. This
is her faith, a simple (but profound)
trust in God.
And this is the mystery of Advent,
nothing is impossible for God, not in Mary's life or in our own.
We must hold on to this Spirit of -
openness to mystery - to something
bigger then ourselves.
Too often we look for God with our own
ideas about what that means, our own images and assumptions about Him and so in
the end - we only find ourselves.
We meet the reasonable, the expected,
the humanly possible, but never the Devine impossible.
But, Our Blessed Mother (without
preconceived ideas) was open to encounter the overshadowing mystery that is
God. She was open to embracing the impossible.
And She would wait for it to unfold in
hopeful and joyful expectation.
Advent reminds us of this.
What we wait for should determine how we
wait.
What we journey towards should govern
our effort to get there.
Our lives, forever changed by the incarnation,
should mirror our faith in Jesus the Christ.
God breaking into our world was not
impossible.
God's coming kingdom fulfilled is not
impossible.
Living in the Spirit now - as Christ
bearers - is not impossible.
Eternal life through Jesus is not impossible.
Advent is a time, that as Christian
believers we wait, alert and joyful.
And we journey forward, as one people,
in faith, hope and love.
We look back to the incarnation with its
sweet tenderness that pierces our hearts
and we look forward to his coming
kingdom.
Advent, always and everywhere rings out
Come, Lord Jesus, Come.
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