Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Advent a period of love-filled waiting

YES, that’s what the liturgical season of Advent is. It’s
a period of a love-filled waiting not only for the most joyous
Christmas, the birth of Christ, but also and most especially of the
second coming of Christ.
  
            We need to look forward to that coming when Christ gathers
us as his people at the end of time, incorporating us into his
mystical body and bringing us to where we truly belong—in heaven where
we, individually and collectively, will enter into a definitive
communion with God, a communion of love in mind and heart.
  
            Christ’s second coming is when we finally complete our
earthly sojourn which is meant to be a time of testing, a time of
making a choice either to be with God or simply to be by ourselves.
   
            That is when we finally would become “alter Christus,”
another Christ, who is the pattern and redeemer of our humanity. That
is when we finally become the true image and likeness of God as God
himself as wanted us to be. That is when we organically form together
with the others the definitive family and people of God with Christ as
the head.
  
            We have to be welcoming to Christ in his second coming,
ever watchful and ready to receive him when he finally comes. Our
watchfulness and readiness should not be spent by simply doing
nothing. Rather it should be a watchfulness and readiness that is full
of love that is expressed in deeds, in the faithful fulfilment of our
duties.
  
            The proper attitude and sentiment during this season of
Advent is somehow described in one the Eucharistic prefaces of Advent.
“When he comes again in glory and majesty, and all is at last made
manifest,’ it says, “we who watch for that day may inherit the great
promise in which now we dare to hope.”
  
            We have to learn to live with the hope of attaining our
final end, fully united and identified with Christ. And so, we have to
learn also how to relate the things that we are doing at any given
moment to heaven.
  
            Again, a prayer in one of the Advent Masses expresses the
same sentiment. “O Lord,” it says, “as we walk amid passing things,
teach us by them to love the things of heaven and hold fast to what
endures.”
  
            We have to help everyone to appreciate the real
significance of Advent and to live by that spirit. For those who can,
let us undertake an effective catechesis. We need to see to it that
Advent is not just a time for merry-making and gift-giving. These are
the peripherals that should not detract from the central and crucial
character of Advent.
  
            Like St. Paul, let us preach constantly, in season and out
of season, when people are receptive to our preaching or hostile. Of
course, we need to do this with gift of tongues, knowing how to
present the same truth to different people with different attitudes.

             May our preaching and catechesis be practical and
practicable, substantiated with clear indications and concrete
examples. May it be attractive and appealing. Given the sensitivity
especially of the young people—the millennials and the Generation Z—we
need to be very creative and do a lot of adaptation.
  
            Let us also tap those with certain authority in schools,
offices, public and private organizations to help out in this task. We
need to make Advent a real Advent, not a fictionalized one.


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