Sunday, December 26, 2021

First Sunday of Christmas - December 26, 2021

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Robert Leo Sevensky, OHC

Christmastide 1 - Sunday, December 26, 2021




Long ago, when prayer and Bible reading were still common in public schools in America, my third-grade teacher, Miss Catherine Ruddy, a stout Irish-American spinster of a certain age, began class every morning with a reading from the New Testament. Invariably it was either the Beatitudes from the Sermon on the Mount or the first five verses of Saint John's gospel which we heard this morning. Though I’m certain that she was a devout Catholic, Miss Ruddy read to us from the King James Version of the Bible, and those words are imprinted on my memory:

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life was the light of men. And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not.”

I’m pretty sure that I had no idea what she was talking about, but I fell in love with the very words themselves.  I loved the sound of the sentence which said, “…the same was in the beginning with God.” What did that mean?  And I marveled at what seemed to be the logical conundrum of saying, “...and without him was not any thing made that was made.”

I'm tempted to say that I still have no idea what Miss Ruddy was talking about when she read us that passage, though that's not quite true. I studied philosophy after all. I have some knowledge of the Greek term logos, the word, the organizing principle and creative rational structure of reality. And now I know that ‘the Word’ was no mere word. It was in fact the inner logic of God for a hurting world. I know now that the Word of which Miss Ruddy, or rather of which St. John spoke and which Miss Ruddy read to us, is none other than the eternal Christ whose birth among us in Jesus we celebrate during these festive days. But having said that, I realize I am merely skimming the surface of a mystery that dives deep into the heart of the Christian proclamation and into our own lives and that of all creation.

There is something tremendously mysterious and almost contradictory in the claims of Christmas. And theologians and poets and hymn writers have delighted in exploring and expressing those paradoxes. This is especially, though not exclusively, true of those ancient voices from the Christian East that have emphasized the self-emptying of God, the Almighty, the infinite one into the vulnerable and tender figure of a human child born into our very human and often inhospitable world.

The language of the Byzantine liturgy is redolent with paradoxes that strain to give expression to the wonder of Christ’s gentle coming among us:

“Today, He who holds the whole creation in His hands is born of a virgin, He whose essence none can touch is bound in swaddling-clothes as a mortal man.  God who in the beginning fashioned the heavens lies in a manger. He who rained manna on His people in the wilderness is fed on milk from His mother’s breast.  The bridegroom of the Church summons the wise men.  The Son of the Virgin accepts their gifts. We worship Thy Nativity, O Christ!” 

The 20th century Anglican theologian Austin Farrer echoes this theme when he writes:

“…Mary holds her finger out, and a divine hand closes on it.  The maker of the world is born a begging child; he begs for milk and does not know that it is milk for which he begs.  We will not lift our hands to pull the love of God down to us, but he lifts his hands to pull human compassion down upon his cradle. … and this is how he brings his love to bear on human pride: by weakness not by strength, by need and not by bounty.” 

But perhaps no one delighted more in the paradox of the Incarnation, of the mystery of God becoming human, than did the 4th century Syriac poet Ephrem of Edessa. In his eleventh Hymn on the Nativity, Ephrem writes:

“Your mother is a cause for wonder: the Lord entered her and became a servant; He who is the Word entered and became silent within her; thunder entered her and made no sound; there entered the Shepherd of all, and in her he became the Lamb, bleating as he came forth.”

“Your mother’s womb has reversed the roles: the Establisher of all entered in His richness, but came forth poor; the Exalted One entered her, but came forth meek; the Splendrous One entered her, but came forth having put on a lowly hue.”

“The Mighty One entered, and put on insecurity from her womb; the Provisioner of all entered and experienced hunger; He who gives drink to all entered and experienced thirst: naked and stripped there came forth from her He who clothes all.”

This is heady stuff indeed, isn’t it?  And worthy of our time and study and reflection. And I love it. 

But, but…I also find, particularly this year, that in addition to this theological and poetic reflection, I also need something at once both more tender and simple. I find myself searching for a more childlike, even childish, approach to this great mystery. 

This year, more than most, I find myself desiring to ponder the mystery of God's love through gazing at a Nativity scene or creche, whether it be a fine Neapolitan extravaganza worthy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art or the roughhewn Neo-Byzantine figures that are before our altar or even a mass-produced nativity set like the one I bought at Woolworth’s when I was perhaps 10 years old while the other boys were trading baseball cards. 

I find myself longing for the familiarity of Christmas carols, even of the sappiest sort. Living in a monastery, I am shielded from the onslaught of this kind of popular Christmas music that invades our culture sometime in mid-October and disappears magically on December 26. This past week as I was driving home from Kingston, I heard for the first time this year the Little Drummer Boy. I almost had to pull off the road because of the tears.  Tears of nostalgia, yes. And perhaps of grief as well for holidays past that shall never be again.  But also, and most powerfully, a spontaneous response to the tender vision of the Word Incarnate, the child Jesus, smiling at the little drummer boy…and at me. Such Christmas imagery, as unsophisticated as it is, has power to cut through the most intellectual or rational of minds and open the stony heart. 

Many years ago, in this Chapel, I heard our Father Bonnell Spencer preach on Christmas. Bonnie was a man of powerful and provocative intellect, an active and restless man even in his old age, always exploring and developing the theological and practical implications of faith, not to mention Democratic party politics. He wrote many books, led countless retreats, and preached sermon upon sermon in his lifetime. But this particular Christmas Bonnie, speaking as he always did from a messy collection of notes, read—thank God, he didn't sing but read—two verses of his favorite Christmas carol, “O little town of Bethlehem”:

“How silently, how silently the wondrous gift is given! So God imparts to human hearts the blessings of his heaven. No ear may hear his coming, but in this world of sin, where meek hearts will receive him, still the dear Christ enters in.”

“Where children pure and happy pray to the blessed Child, where misery cries out to thee, Son of the mother mild; where charity stands watching and faith holds wide the door, the dark night wakes, the glory breaks, and Christmas comes once more.”

Bonnie and the Chapel fell silent for a good long while. Because when the heart is touched by the loving paradox of God dwelling among us, or as Eugene Peterson puts it in his paraphrase, when God becomes flesh and blood and moves into the neighborhood; when the Infinite One becomes vulnerable and we vulnerable ones are caught up in the infinite and astonishing love and mercy that is the Word made Flesh, the Logos of the universe, the fundamental principle of all being…then the only appropriate, the only available, the only adequate response is silence.  

At Christmas Matins we sing this lovely antiphon on the Benedictus: “When all things were in quiet silence, and that night was in the midst of her swift course, your almighty Word, O Lord, leapt down out of your royal throne.  Alleluia.”

I long to share in that silence this Christmastide.  Many of us do.  And in that silence, may the Eternal Word leap down once again from the royal throne into the throne of your heart and mine.  And we will know joy and wonder once again, you and me and Miss Ruddy (God rest her soul!) and all the Miss Ruddy’s and Bonnie Spencer’s and little drummer boys who have touched our lives.  May we be surprised into silence. For out of silence, the Word is born. 

As Philips Brooks so gently reminds us:  How silently, how silently the wondrous gift is given!  Isn’t it, just.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Christmas Day - December 25, 2021

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Josép Martinez-Cubero, OHC

Christmas Day - Saturday, December 25, 2021




“The shepherds said to one another, ‘Let us go now to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken place…’ So they went with haste and found Mary and Joseph, and the child lying in the manger…. they made known… The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God...”

If one thing we can learn from the shepherds is that, in the beginning God created… VERBS! That’s right, God created action words. And then, God created STORIES! And a story is the shortest distance between humanity and the truth. 

My work as a director of a children’s theatre before I entered the monastery had to do with guiding children and adolescents in using their imagination to find the truth a story reveals. And the best way to do that is through the verbs. We may not be able to identify with the nouns in an old story, but verbs are most often timeless.

When I hear about ancient Near Eastern shepherds, for instance, keeping watch over their flocks by night, the fact of the matter is that, I’m thousands of years and thousands of miles removed from that world. As a twenty-first century US American who has lived mostly in cities and was even intimidated by cows and sheep when I visited Scotland (even though I hate to admit it!), it is a stretch for me to identify with ancient shepherds and their world. But I know what it means to say: “Let’s go now.” I know what it means to find something out for myself, to see with my own eyes. I know what it is to tell what I’ve seen. I know about glorifying and praising God in a powerful moment of encountering Jesus.

So here is a story I made up based on other stories I’ve heard before. You may not be able to relate to the nouns. But I bet you will get the verbs. And I hope you will recognize the truth in it.

There was once a Puerto Rican niño (boy) who wanted to meet Dios (God). The adults in this niño’s life were perplexed but promised to bring him to church on Christmas Day, where, they assured him, he could speak to Dios. But el niño knew in his heart that meeting Dios could surely happen sooner (it was summer, after all).

He remembered seeing a movie en la televisión about Dios and Jesús who were on a beach far away that had just sand but no water, and where men wore long dresses and soldiers wore skirts. So he decided to go find that beach so that he could meet Dios. He packed his mochila (backpack) with some food for the long journey. His mamá had just cooked some pastelillos, so he loaded his mochila with those and a thermos of jugo de parcha and off he went to find Dios.

El niño travelled about half a mile and came upon, not the beach, but la plaza del pueblo (townsquare) where he met a viejita (old woman). She was sitting on a bench staring at las palomas (pigeons). El niño sat down next to her and opened his mochila. He noticed that la viejita seemed hungry, so he offered her one of his pastelillos and some jugo de parcha that she gratefully accepted. As they were eating together, la viejita smiled fondly al niño. Her smile was so lovely that el niño was overjoyed.

The two of them sat there on that bench en la plaza del pueblo eating and smiling, but never said a word. After a while, el niño got up to leave, but before he’d gone more than a few steps, he turned around and ran back to la viejita and gave her a big hug, and la viejita gave him the biggest smile he had ever seen.

It was getting a bit late and el niño decided to return to the safety of his home. When his mamá saw him coming in, she was curious about the look of joy on her son’s face. She asked him, “Hijo, what did you do today that made you so happy?” El niño replied, “I had lunch with Dios and She has the most beautiful smile I have ever seen!”

Meanwhile, la viejita also radiant with joy, returned to her home. Su hija (her grown daughter) was curious about the look of peace on her mamá’s face and asked her, “Mami, what did you do today that made you so peaceful?”  La viejita replied, “I ate pastelillos and drank jugo de parcha with Dios, and he is much younger than I expected!”

It may be a sentimental little story, but so is the story of the Nativity. A story is just a story until we find the truth in it. The story of the Puerto Rican boy and the old lady on the townsquare tells a very important truth. We can see God in all sorts of ways and in all sorts of characters because as Julian of Norwich insisted, “We are not just made by God, we are made of God.” The incarnation is about our realization, our welcome, our consent, our gratitude to the mystery that lives and breathes in, with, through, and beyond us. The distinction between the divine and the human, the holy and the ordinary is blurred forever. The spiritual and the material coexist in the same body, in the same place. Our humanity, personal and corporate, is the instrument of God’s work in this world. As we conjure up images of the newborn child, the mystery is born in our hearts once more.

And how is that mystery revealed? It is revealed through human biology, human need, human tragedy huddled together to give birth. God dwells in the vivid details of the scandal of the incarnation story- Mary, a young teenager (probably thirteen or fourteen years old), in danger of facing the wrath of her community because she is pregnant. At best, her pregnancy renders her the object of gossip, scorn, and exclusion from her village. At worst, it places her at the risk of death by stoning. Joseph, confused, living in a land oppressed by enemies, homeless, unwelcome, struggling to find a safe place for Mary to give birth in a world full of injustice. And the Nativity story, according to the anonymous story writer we call Luke, tells us that the news of the birth of the Savior comes first to some shepherds- among the lowliest of the emperor’s subjects- poor, illiterate, and thought to be dishonorable because they could not be home at night to protect their wives. They were outcasts and considered thieves because they grazed their flocks on other people’s property.

So, the Nativity story tells a very important truth. God’s alignment is with the material, the embodied, the messy. God looks with favor on the real flesh-and-blood experiences of simple and singular human beings. But there is more. We are invited to learn from Mary’s consent, from Joseph’s humble obedience, and from the shepherd’s curiosity and sense of urgency that anything and anyone can lead us to God. We are invited to look to everyone and everything as a revelation of God. All is gift. All is sacred because the Light shines in the darkness and the darkness can never overcome it! ¡Feliz Navidad a todos! ¡Que así sea, en el nombre del Padre, del Hijo y del Espíritu Santo! 

Amen+

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Advent 4 C - December 19, 2021

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Bernard Delcourt, OHC

Advent 4 C - Sunday, December 19, 2021





In the name of God the Mother, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Our lesson today recounts the Visitation of Mary to her cousin Elizabeth. It makes both of them prophetesses of the great things God will bring about. Those great things will come in the life, death and resurrection of a little boy who is growing in the womb of Mary.

Mary’s prophecy comes in the shape of the Magnificat. This new testament canticle features prominently in every office of Vespers we sing here a the monastery. This song of Mary is a constant reminder of the work of God in the world, and therefore our mission in the world.

The Magnificat is of course a song of praise to the glory of God. But it is also a revolutionary song and a socioeconomic manifesto. By its sheer repetition in our monastic life, we can come to neglect those aspects of the Magnificat. A conscious re-appraisal of this gem is in order.

*****

But first, let’s look at the circumstances of the Magnificat. The Song of Mary is uttered by an out-of-wedlock pregnant teenager. For this prophecy of what God is about, God chose a poor servant girl from a provincial backwater of the empire, with dark skin and dark brown eyes and dark hair to be the mother of Jesus.

And she sings her song of praise in answer to an older cousin’s greeting. A cousin who was hitherto considered barren and whose husband priest is dumbstruck into a temporary silence of the patriarchy. 

Mary and Elizabeth are two marginal people in their society. And yet it is they who are announcing the world-changing coming of God’s justice, to be born in a brown-skinned little baby. 

In God’s choice of her prophetesses, God has already marked a preferential option for the poor; poor in power, poor in resources, poor in status.

*****

Mary starts by glorifying God. She expresses her awe for God’s being and her joy at God’s doings. Her whole being is engaged in this rejoicing. "My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God, my Savior!" We can’t help but be uplifted by her devotion and join her in singing that God is awesome!

Next, Mary expresses her amazement at God choosing a lowly servant for God’s mission. God didn’t choose a queen; God didn’t choose a millionaire; God didn’t chose a celebrated bride with status. She chose a poor servant girl from the backwaters.

Mary acknowledges her exaltation.  God has chosen her to be the mother the Savior. All generations will count her blessed.

Then Mary spends most of her song describing the way God is in general. This general character of God accounts for why God has treated her the way she has in her lowliness and thus leads her to rejoice and magnify the Mighty One.

And this character portrait of God paints a great reversal of fortune.

*****

Mary sings what God is really like. God is not the least impressed by any of our pride, power, or opulence. She has mercy on those who are in awe of God. God favors those who humble themselves. She cares for those who turn from the ego-boosting accumulation of wealth to the lowliness of self-denial for the sake of others.

Listen to the five important verbs in this part of the Magnificat. Mary tells us that God regards or respects the poor, exalts the poor, feeds the poor, helps the poor, remembers the poor. 

Those verbs are in the past tense in the Magnificat but they need to be in the future tense in our lives. God has done a lot of this already. But as the hands and feet of God in the world, we need to continue the mission. We need to undertake being lovers of the poor for God’s sake.

*****

The Song of Mary is a revolutionary bombshell because it turns the values of this world upside down. The poor are important, not so much the rich and mighty. Mary is announcing what her Son will be about.

Do you remember what Jesus said in his first sermon in the gospel of Luke? A first sermon reveals what is important to a person. In his first sermon in Luke, Jesus chose to read from Isaiah and said, 

‘The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, 

because he has anointed me

to bring good news to the poor.

He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives

and recovery of sight to the blind,

to let the oppressed go free, 

to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.’

And Jesus added:

‘Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.’

You see, prisons have always been filled with poor people, and that is true today. Do a sociological study of our prisons and you will find our prisons filled with poor people. In his first sermon, Jesus is passionately concerned about poor people, and poor people are often found in prison or fighting wars for the rich.

Do you remember the beatitudes in Luke? Do you remember the first beatitude in Luke, his first blessing?  Jesus said,

‘Blessed are you who are poor,

   for yours is the kingdom of God.’

The poor get the kingdom of God. They understand their utter need of God. And they receive the kingdom.

We know that rich people don’t need God very much, because most rich people are usually busy living life to what they deem to be their fullest and they don’t have time for God.

*****

But Luke’s motif of God’s reversal of fortunes is not intended to raise violent resistance or to drive the wealthy and powerful to despair.

Hopefully, the well-off feel exhorted to deal with their wealth in a way that brings them into a positive relation with the poor in order to partake in the same promised salvation.

God’s revolution is not a violent one but it announces an entirely different way of being stewards of the Earth. What would the laws governing our economy look like if they were written with the Magnificat in mind?

How can we support those kinds of socioeconomic transformation in our lives? Do we vote for people who stand for that kind of society? Do we spend our resources (time, money and prayer) in a way that supports the poor?

Listen to the Magnificat. Listen to the woman who educated our Savior.

The Magnificat announces a revolutionary Jesus. Come Lord Jesus, come!


Sunday, December 12, 2021

Advent 3 C - December 12, 2021

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Randy Greve, OHC

Advent 3 C - Sunday, December 12, 2021





Prophets have tough jobs. As we grow and our habits of thinking and acting become fixed, we adapt into an imperfect mixture of healthy and unhealthy thinking and acting.  Adaptation becomes familiar, and familiar becomes habit, reality, the security of what is known.  The imperfect ways serve a function, meet at need.  If we are in a crowd that shares the acceptance of our hurtful ways, then they are normalized. If a call to conversion enters into our awareness, it will only become possible if it contains a better story - one that is more attractive than the familiar and comfortable.  To convert, we must be persuaded or come to believe that something better awaits us if we stop doing what we are doing and take up another course of action.  

If you have ever undergone a conversion, become sober, allowed yourself to be changed deep within, you know what a journey it can be.  The prophet can appeal to our moral aspirations by critique of our behavior and the danger and pain that it is causing.  The prophet can inspire us to a greater vision of ethical life - to see beyond our own selfish and immediate interest to the good of the community and the long-term viability of peace and harmony.  So once we are sufficiently motivated to avoid pain and adopt a better way, we will change - but not before.  If the stakes are high, if our very lives (and perhaps souls) are at risk, then the urgency of the prophet’s witness becomes the means of awakening us to our true condition of imperfection.  God’s love will do whatever it takes to get our attention, to make us listen, if in those moments there is the possibility that we will attend to the call, heed the warnings, and forsake our sins.  

We can choose to ignore or mock John the Baptist and his message, but that does not change the urgency of repentance and preparation.  Criticize his style or his method of pastoral care all you want, but the bottom line remains the same - he is speaking to us, the repentance he demands is directed to us, the call to wake up and avoid catastrophe is for us.  The charges he is levelling at the religious leaders of his day can be just as true for us.  These are the traps of the so-called “good” person.  They made following the external standard of the law a life substitute rather than a life revealer. Righteousness was not a way into dependence on God, but a way out. Abraham is our father, everything will be fine, God will protect us, the Romans can’t harm us.  And then 70 AD and the Fall of Jerusalem happened and it was all destroyed, not one stone upon another.  Apocalypses are not real until they are, and we deny the possibility of the same happening to us at our peril.   

Today’s Gospel is a continuation of Luke 3 from last week’s reading.  Last week’s call to repentance and the offer of forgiveness and the quote from Isaiah 40 framed the theological overview of the urgent alarm to wake up and be alert for the coming of Messiah.  The way of the Lord is to be smoothed out and leveled.  Oppression, injustice, abuse, and corruption are to be called out and exposed and put right.  We are invited to participate in the great leveling project that clears a straight path for Christ.  Repentance means “transcend your mind”, your fixed categories of thought, of grasping at absolutes and non-negotiables and welcome new ways of thinking and speaking and being that will be open to the surprise of Messiah’s coming.  “Stop hurting yourselves and each other”, John the Baptist is saying, “there is a better way.”  

The common thread which weaves together each answer John gives is that entrance into the kingdom of God goes against nature, against our ingrained and habituated ways of discerning what benefits us.  Whoever wants to repent and be transformed does so with full awareness of his or her responsibility and the consequences of choices made and not made.  This is a call to the narrow and difficult way.  As I embark upon this way, my selfishness and greed and arrogance do not magically disappear, I am not delivered from temptation and struggle - if anything, waking up increases temptation and struggle.  

Group consciousness, living in a mass movement, is the road to hell.  John is not exhorting his listeners to easy, charitable gestures of moral niceness, he is calling them to fundamentally change the way they are in the world.  His commands are not about the material goods and money, but about relationship - the potential for community, sharing, abundance, peace that is more valuable than all the money Rome collects or steals.  John is interested in fundamentally subverting the system of injustice.  Generosity in a crowd that idolizes greed is controversial.  Kindness where extortion and fraud is acceptable is revolutionary.  Sacrifice where building bigger barns is a sign of success is dangerous.  This is the kind of language that could cause a person to lose their head.

Christian communities of all types continue the vocation of John. We hear and repent and proclaim conversion. We model and witness to the coming of the Messiah in every act of service and compassion because those acts are exactly the acts that renounce and dismantle the evil ways of this world which oppose God.  From our privileged perches we can faintly imagine the kind of distress and fear that filled the air of Israel in the first century.  The times were different then, we say. We are safe, it can never happen here, we say. If the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD was the wrath of God, it happened because the people did not discern the time, they became arrogant and complacent, and believed they were God’s special, protected people.  Whenever we close our ears and shut our eyes and dissolve into the crowd, we are in that response already experiencing the wrath that betrays our human dignity and divine image.

As we embark on the journey of conversion, we keep in mind that the end is joy.  Listening leads to repentance, repentance leads to liberation, liberation frees us to receive the grace and mercy of Christ, which lavishes us with the blessings of goodness and peace.  Waking up to ourselves and changing our ways is the deepest expression of what it means to be beloved children of God, objects of God’s eternal and unrelenting love.   The Collect confesses to God that we are “sorely hindered by our sins”, next year, God willing, when we are here for the third Sunday of Advent, we will once again know the truth of those words.  But knowing how hindered we are is the opening to what we most need.  The collect goes on to ask God to help and deliver us, speedily, speedily, by your grace and mercy. 

Amen.

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Advent 2 C - December 5, 2021

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Robert James Magliula, OHC

Advent 2 C - Sunday, December 5, 2021




Our biblical tradition is one of God acting in history in relation to specific people, times, and places. In Luke the word of God comes not to those in seats of political or religious power but to John, in the scary and confusing place of the wilderness, where God had spoken to the people in the past and through which God had led the people to a new and promised life. Quoting from the prophet Isaiah, John challenges us with a message of personal and corporate self-examination of our lives, values, and priorities. He announces the opportunity for personal change by the baptism of repentance so that all may see the salvation of God.

The imagery John employs is that of making, opening, and clearing a way for God. His invitation to repent is a door to forgiveness. Forgiveness comes from the Greek word meaning “to let go”. Repentance is not the same as remorse or regret. It is not wishing you were a better person, or that some things had never happened. It’s not feeling guilty, ashamed, or afraid. It’s not something that leaves us stuck or standing still. Repentance is about movement, letting yourself be grasped by God, getting new bearings, and relying on God for direction. The new life that follows repentance, the new direction that comes with a fresh start is what John is proclaiming in the wilderness. His message is a call to action: repent, turn around, accept help. God is coming to meet you.

Repentance can come in many ways. It can happen when you are confronted by remorse, disappointment, or regret, or maybe the sense that you’re spinning your wheels. Maybe it comes from something as small as wishing you hadn’t said or done something. Maybe it comes when you realize other people are with you on your journey and that your decisions affect them too and that the wilderness is not a good place to be forever. When God turns us around, offers us a way to get unstuck, to move ahead with a new way of life, our response can look like the description from Baruch: a widow who puts away her mourning clothes and instead puts on a beautiful garment. It’s not that sorrow has never happened or that there was not a reason to grieve. She accepts the robe of righteousness and a crown of glory because she trusts that her wholeness and joy lie ahead of her in some future that God is constructing.

All the lessons for today reflect the unique character of our faith in the way in which it is constantly tied to specific times and places and people in history. We not only have Luke’s carefully dated notice of the beginning of the ministry of John the Baptist, but Baruch’s prophecy of a very concrete return to Jerusalem for those in exile, as well as Paul’s letter to the congregation he founded at Philippi, with its prayer that their love may overflow with knowledge and insight, which will have produced “a harvest of righteousness.” Our lessons today are directed to us, in this time, in this place as well.

Every Advent we hear the story of John calling us to a recognition of our brokenness and to the Baptism of God’s forgiveness. Every Advent we’re called to the recognition of our failures, our self- righteousness; not in the abstract, but in the concrete daily acts of our lives. The “harvest” Paul refers to is the rightness of the way in which we live and deal with one another. If we’re looking for some spiritual or intellectual way that devalues the importance of our daily acts, then we have no business looking forward to the feast of the Incarnation. We are called to be Christ-like, and that likeness is in terms not of what we believe, but in terms of our concrete action in the real world in which we live. An orthodox theology has its place and its value, but only if it serves as the source of the knowledge and insight to do the work of God in the world. The call to us is the same as Paul’s call to his old congregation. We too are to produce in our lives the same “harvest of righteousness.” 

Only when we know the reality of our need for forgiveness, for the action and the grace of God in our own lives, can we be prepared to understand the reality of Jesus’ coming into flesh like ours. God never waits for us to know enough, or to be good enough. At all times and in all places, God comes to us as we are, where we are, and being who we are. Salvation history is rooted in the tangible history of the world. God comes to us not in some spiritually perfect or abstract relationship, but in the day-by-day business of our lives. Every time we act, whether out of love or fear, out of concern or self-protection, out of our responsibility for each other or self-interest, we are showing the harvest of our lives. The harvest we reap is determined by how we act in relation to others. 

We’re so afraid to lose the control that we think we have over the life that we think we’re living. Ego identifies with entitlement and individualism. We associate our ego with all our being. This distortion of reality is a lie which removes us further from ourselves, God, and each other. This illusion is insatiable, making our need for security, affection, and control lead us to addictions. It is nearly impossible to heal isolated individuals inside of our unhealthy and unhealed society, or inside any version of Christianity that supports exclusion and superiority. As we see so clearly in our day, individuals who remain inside of an incoherent and unsafe universe fall back into anger, fear, and narcissism. God’s unconditional love destroys our ego’s assumptions. This feast we’re preparing to celebrate is about being liberated from this illusion of an ultimately isolated self that must make it on its own.

The deepest question of our life is not what our father or mother or anyone else thought of us, but what we think of us. Our most difficult challenge is self-acceptance. If we take a loving look at ourselves, we will see that behind our restlessness is our longing. The problem is that we feed the restlessness instead of the longing. Without the capacity to go within, because of our fear that there is nothing there, we will only experience brokenness. When we dissect ourselves in perfectionism, we only find our flaws. We are more complex and there is more to us than we think.

Creatureliness is the root of our spiritual life. If we are not rooted in that reality we cannot grow. Roots give us humility. Without roots we become inflated causing us to overemphasize where we want to be instead of where we are. Jesus wrestled with what it was like to be a creature and struggled, like us, with the reality that there is always a pull to regress as we move forward. The human temptation is to equate our experience of God with God. But being present in the moment opens us to perceive the real Presence, to let the mystery encounter us, God on God’s terms, not ours.

God is the source of all creative expression. We do not even create ourselves. Our true self is revealed to us. Our choice is to be receptive and participate, to live into our potential. We anticipate and participate in God doing the work because God will do nothing in our lives without our consent. We must give permission for grace to be received. 

This season invites us to slow down, be alert, attentive, and learn to gaze at and welcome reality. To do this, we must let go of our present way of seeing things. Reality is filled with risks, but only in taking a long loving look at the real can we uncover the transcendent in the imminent, the divine in the human. Our unresolved conflicts and issues are no obstacle to how infinitely precious we are to God. Let us look mercifully on ourselves and others. Let us try to see ourselves as God sees us as we prepare for the coming of the one who took on our humanity.  

+Amen.