Fr Randy Sly: Advent is a Time for Preparation
Some see Advent as a Little Lent. However, the focus is very different. It is a season of hope filled expectation and preparation for a coming of the Lord. We are called to "clean house" and make room for the Lord in our lives. However, like most gifts, we do not really appreciate its content unless we unwrap it and receive it.
Highlights
Catholic Online (https://www.catholic.org)
12/7/2014 (9 years ago)
Published in Christmas / Advent
Keywords: Advent, reflection, preparation, repentance, prayer, contemplation,
WASHINGTON,D.C. (Catholic Online) - Some see Advent as a "Little Lent." However, the focus is very different. It is a season of hope filled expectation and preparation for a coming of the Lord. We are called to "clean house" and make room for the Lord in our lives. However, like most gifts, we do not really appreciate its content unless we unwrap it and receive it.
Let us keep the Advent season and discover the true treasure of His Comings!
The word advent means coming and this liturgical season deals with the comings of Jesus Christ, both his first and second. In fact, some theologians have called Advent the Season of the Already/Not Yet. He has already come but he has not yet come again.
Advent basically reminds us of the interval in which we are now living. We have the merits and graces of his first coming poured out among us, yet even now, we can think about his future coming; what it will be like when he comes again in the culmination of salvation history.
St. Cyril of Jerusalem talked about Advent in his Catechetical lectures during the middle of the Fourth Century. There he talks about the importance of looking both ways.
We preach not one advent only of Christ, but a second also, far more glorious than the former. For the former gave a view of His patience; but the latter brings with it the crown of a divine kingdom.
For all things, for the most part, are twofold in our Lord Jesus Christ: a twofold generation; one, of God, before the ages; and one, of a Virgin, at the close of the ages: His descents twofold; one, the unobserved, like rain on a fleece; and a second His open coming, which is to be. We rest not then upon His first advent only, but look also for His second.
These are wonderful theological perspectives that can help us understand the significance of this interesting season. Advent, however, can become far more personal.
Reflections on the Already
As a Vietnam veteran I learned one thing during my deployment in Southeast Asia - I was mortal. Just after returning, a young man I had met challenged me to give my life fully to Christ. He told me that this was not just going to church a lot; this meant developing a life of daily prayer, Scripture reading, and dependence on His grace.
I was being called to take the promises that had been made at my baptism and make them my own - completely. It meant depending on the power of the Holy Spirit for strength, something that was sacramentally endowed in confirmation.
My friend reminded me that Christ had told His disciples, I came that they might have life and have it abundantly. (John 10:10) All Christians are invited to receive grace to live abundantly in this life as well possess the hope of eternal life. This was why Christ had come; the reason for His first Advent.
A consecrated life is not one reserved only for those in Holy Orders or living out their lives in a religious vocation. This is the life all Christians are called to live as the norm.
While I had always thought of myself as a good person, I had never given our Lord first place in my life. When I offered my yes to God, based on my friend's invitation, I found my life truly transformed.
Through the help of those who were more mature in the faith, I learned how to live more actively for Christ. I found that this commitment meant allowing His grace and teachings to be drawn into my life and having my life drawn more into His world - the Church.
Now, as Advent comes each year, I like to reflect on how I have lived with respect to my life of devotion and service. Am I availing myself of the Sacraments? Am I praying, reading the Scriptures, and spending time in personal formation? Am I becoming the salt and light to the world that I am called to be?
These are wonderful points of reflection, remembering Christ's first coming - the first Christmas. As the Apostle Paul reminded Timothy in his epistle, "This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief." (I Timothy 1:15)
Reflections on the Not Yet
The First Sunday of Advent, no matter which reading cycle is used, focuses on the second coming. We are remembering a truth that we declare in every Mass when we recite the Nicene Creed.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.
We profess it but do we really ponder it? We rarely talk or think about the second coming beyond that affirmation. So, Advent, especially the first Sunday, is particularly important.
He will come again. This is our reminder that, no matter what is happening in the world, the come a day when Christ will return so that the Father will put all things under his authority. While those who have no faith may think they rule today, tomorrow belongs to Christ. God does have the last word and will bring everything into proper order.
His second coming also means a coming judgment, with regard to our faith in Jesus Christ.
The older I get and the crazier the world seems to become, the more I think about His coming, about our hope in Him, the final resurrection of the body and life in the world to come. What you see now is not all there is in the Christian life. Thankfully.
We live under the brilliance of a great hope for all eternity. It would be one thing if we were only given a better life here on earth and then - nothing. How hopeless.
We have faith to invest in our life here on earth; but we also possess hope as an anchor for the future; it is called our blessed hope, which is His Second Coming.
The Apostle Paul talks about this in his letter to the Romans, where he declares, "And do this because you know the time; it is the hour now for you to awake from sleep. For our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed; the night is advanced, the day is at hand.
Let us then throw off the works of darkness (and) put on the armor of light; let us conduct ourselves properly as in the day, not in orgies and drunkenness, not in promiscuity and licentiousness, not in rivalry and jealousy. But let us put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the desires of the flesh.
His second coming also gives me encouragement to continue working on His behalf. Not only do I want to be ready for his coming, I want others to join me. I am so deeply grateful this year for the privilege of celebrating at the altar as a priest of His Church! To stand, in persona Christi, and offer the greatest gift of all for the salvation of the whole world.
The work we all do in preparing people for His coming(s) is the work of Evangelization. We are telling people the Good News in stereo - He came that we might have life through His grace. He also is coming again in Glory! he comes every day to those who have eyes to see and ears to hear and hearts to receive. There is a future victory that awaits all of us who believe.
In Saint John Paul II's Apostolic Letter,"At the Beginning of the Third Millennium, he reminded faithful Catholics of the Lord's challenge to the Apostle Peter, Duc in Altum, or put out into the deep. This instruction came after Jesus had used Peter's boat to teach those on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. When he had finished his instruction, our Lord had the fishermen put out to the deep where they caught a great number of fish.
In this life we are called to put out into the deep of our world on behalf of Jesus Christ, so that those of every family, tribe, and nation will hear the Good News of Jesus Christ. As John Paul II stated:
Christ must be presented to all people with confidence. We shall address adults, families, young people, children, without ever hiding the most radical demands of the Gospel message, but taking into account each person's needs in regard to their sensitivity and language, after the example of Paul who declared: I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some (1 Cor 9:22)."
At the conclusion of his Apostolic Letter, the Holy Father declared, Now, the Christ whom we have contemplated and loved bids us to set out once more on our journey: 'Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit' (Mt 28:19). The missionary mandate accompanies us into the Third Millennium and urges us to share the enthusiasm of the very first Christians: we can count on the power of the same Spirit who was poured out at Pentecost and who impels us still today to start out anew, sustained by the hope "which does not disappoint (Rom 5:5)
In Advent, we remember that we are living in the interval between the already - that Christ has come - and the not-yet - that He will come again. This is the period in history where He is calling His Church to Evangelization. We begin with ourselves, reflecting on our own life in Christ. We also think of the future hope that belongs to all who are in Christ and those yet who will come to Him.
Many years ago, I knew a very wealthy successful businessman in Grand Rapids, Michigan who owned a chain of Chicken restaurants. He had a deep faith in Christ, which leaked into every area of his life. The following words were printed on the top of every bag of chicken that left one of his stores, Only One Life Twill Soon Be Passed, Only What's Done for Christ Will Last.
This Advent is a wonderful opportunity to review those lasting things in our lives. Advent is a time for cleaning house, for digging into the the storehouse of living faith to prepare ourselves for His coming so that we - and the world - will be ready for His coming(s).
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Father Randy Sly is a priest with the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter (http://usordinariate.org) established by the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, through the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus. He is the chaplain of the St. John Fisher Ordinariate Community, a priest in residence at Our Lady of Hope Catholic Church and Director of Pro-Life Activities for the Ordinariate. He is Chaplain to the Common Good movement and a popular speaker for parishes, apostolates and Christian organizations.
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