Gospel Reflections by Father Gerry Pierse, C.Ss.R.

C - 1st Sunday of Advent


Jer 33:14-16 • 1 Thes 3:12-4:2 • Lk 21:25-28, 34-36

The Hope That Gives Life

Lourdes was the most empty person I ever met. She seemed to have no inner self, direction or authority. She just floated along, like a piece of paper on water, blown by every breeze and carried by every current. Her three elder sisters had married 1975, 1976 and 1977, respectively. She fell into the pattern and got married in 1978. Five years later she was childless but was not sure whether or not she should get medical help. Her husband Tony thought it would be a good idea but her grandmother had told her that doctors were no good in those things. She was not sure if she really wanted children or even that she loved Tony. Her sister advised her to take a job but her mother said she should not. She was without passion. She could not say that there was anything in life that she truly loved or hated. There was nothing about which she could rage or get angry. She had no opinion of her own on anything. I was not so surprised when I heard that, a few years after I had spoken to her, Lourdes got cancer and died. After all, what did she have to live for?

Mike was 45 when he got the big C. His oncologist gave him a 50/50 chance of total recovery after surgery and chemotherapy. But his psychologist gave him an 80/20 chance. His oncologist said that the outcome was not easily predictable. He was ever being surprised. Given two people who had apparently the same physical conditions, one would recover and the other would not. The psychologists seem to have a better record of accuracy in prediction. For them the person who could accept the reality honestly, and have hope, had a better chance of recovery. The psychologist knew that Mike had a very good chance because after he had listened to his doctor about his operation and further therapy, he had set up a game of golf for himself for the first reasonable date. He was looking to the future realistically, and with hope.
Today, is the First Sunday of Advent, the period of preparation for Christmas and the coming of the Christ child. But the dominant idea in today's readings is the second coming of Christ and the end of the world. Does it not seem a bit strange that the church puts a gloomy prospect before our eyes as we prepare for a joyous event? Maybe there is a good reason for this.

Today, at the start of the Liturgical Year the church invites us to set out on a great journey - to follow the footstep of Christ in all of his mysteries so that we can live as he lived. St. Luke gives us the last address of his public ministry where Jesus is clearly fretful about the future as he paints a bleak picture of the end of the world. There is talk of nations in fear and of people dying in agony. Yet Jesus' advice is "Stay awake, praying at all times for the strength to survive all that is going to happen." In Jesus' view there is a far side to disaster. The good news is that final liberation and resurrection comes out of the disaster.

Like the prophets before him Jesus is painting a grim view of the future in order to influence the present. He does not want to paralyse them with fear but to energize them into action. The real purpose of speaking about the last days is to affect the present ones. Be awake, look reality in the eye and then act accordingly.

Today's gospel story calls on us to do two things that can be very hard to hold together: to be realistic about how the world is going and at the same time not to lose hope in the future. Today we begin to retell the story of a God who so loved the world that he sent his only Son to be human just like us. This son did not have an easy time. No indeed! But he worked through suffering and disappointment, passion and death, to resurrection and a new fullness of life. He left us the message that if we live with him we will die with him, and if we die with him we will also rise with him. Many people view religion and prayer as ways of escaping from reality and suffering. Prayer is rather a way of sitting still with reality, knowing that there is another side to suffering, and gaining the courage from this to continue on the journey.

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Taken from Sundays into Silence - A Pathway to Life. Copyright © 1998 by Claretian Publications

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Sundays into Silence

A Pathway to Life

by Gerry Pierse, cssr
380 pp., PhP 299, U$ 19.95

“The best word I can find to describe this book is integration. In these reflections on the gospel readings for year A, B, and C of the liturgical cycle, Fr. Pierse integrates the richness of the word of God with experiences and stories from life in the community. He shows how through silence, the word can bear fruit in service and sacrament.” (R. J. Cardinal Vidal)

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