Homily for the Third Sunday of Advent, December 14, 2014, Year B
Fr.
René J. Butler, M.S.
Director, La Salette Shrine
Enfield, NH
The designers’ challenge would be to create that “robe of salvation,” that “mantle of justice,” which at the same time would express the soul’s joy in God. I think it would make a great show.
Director, La Salette Shrine
Enfield, NH
The third
Sunday of Advent is called “Gaudete Sunday.” It comes from the first word of
the “Entrance antiphon” or “Introit” of the Mass. “Gaudete” is Latin for
“rejoice,” and the text of the antiphon is from Philippians 4:4, “Rejoice in
the Lord always; again I say, rejoice!” It appears in a shorter form in today’s
second reading: “Rejoice always.” More on this later.
Television
shows have gone through many fads and phases. There was the age of quiz shows,
the age of westerns, of variety shows, of situation comedies, of detectives, and
so on. Today we are in the age of “reality shows.”
They are of
two types. There are those where we simply observe people: litigants in small
claims court, women buying a wedding dress, survivalists, home buyers, you name
it. Others are competitions, in which each week someone wins and someone is
eliminated.
Some of the
competitions involve fashion designers. At the beginning of each episode they
are given a challenge; they have to make a garment either using specific
materials, or inspired by a work of art, a city, an animal, a famous person. In
today’s first reading there is a text that would provide just such a challenge.
Here it is:
I
rejoice heartily in the LORD,
in
my God is the joy of my soul;
for
he has clothed me with a robe of salvation
and
wrapped me in a mantle of justice.
The designers’ challenge would be to create that “robe of salvation,” that “mantle of justice,” which at the same time would express the soul’s joy in God. I think it would make a great show.
As
interesting as that might be, however, they could never come close. The robe
and mantle in question are God’s work. He designed it special for his people.
His inspiration was his own promise to restore them to their own land after the
time of exile, and to make them faithful to him once again.
John the
Baptist, featured in today’s Gospel, would not have fared well in one of those competition
shows. He stated clearly and emphatically that he was not the Messiah, not
Elijah (whose return was expected “before the day of the Lord,” according to
Malachi 3:23), not “the Prophet” (perhaps the one promised by Moses in
Deuteronomy 18:15). And later on, when his disciples told him that Jesus had
begun baptizing, his reply was: “He must increase, I must decrease.” In effect
he was saying, “My work is done here.” It was a recognition that his work
wasn’t really his work at all. He was
just “a voice,” an instrument for announcing God’s word.
The same
reality applies to our spiritual life. Sometimes when people seek spiritual
direction they are under the impression that a spiritual director will simply
tell them what to do in order to make progress in their life of faith.
Actually, it is more like what St. Paul writes to the Thessalonians: “Test
everything.”
I usually put
it this way: follow what inspires and attracts; if that isn’t what God is
calling you to, you will find out soon enough. In other words, as in John the
Baptist’s case, it isn’t our work. It’s God’s work, God’s grace, God’s gift.
St. Paul goes on: “May the God of peace make you perfectly holy and may you
entirely, spirit, soul, and body, be preserved blameless for the coming of our
Lord Jesus Christ. The one who calls you is faithful, and he will also
accomplish it.”
We don’t make
ourselves holy. We can’t, on our own, preserve ourselves blameless. But God,
who is faithful, will accomplish it.
He will—he
really will—clothe us with a robe of salvation. He really will wrap us in a
mantle of justice. He really will make us rejoice heartily in him, and, as St.
Paul says, “rejoice always!”
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