Advent Sunday

‘Gwisgwch yr Arglwydd Iesu Grist amdanoch’

‘But put on the Lord Jesus Christ.’ (Rom 13:14)

Today is Advent Sunday, the start of the season of Advent. The next four weeks are a time of waiting, of expectation: for the coming of Jesus Christ. Both as we prepare to celebrate His Birth at Christmas, and for the Second Coming of Christ as our Saviour and our Judge. The idea of Jesus’ return has not always been seen as something to look forward to. Judgement has been equated with condemnation, and fear of the coming judgement has been used to control people. Yet, as Christians, we look forward to Our Lord’s Second Coming, just as we look forward to our annual celebration of His First Coming, at Christmas.

In today’s Gospel Jesus is teaching His disciples about the end times. Our Lord draws a comparison between the Last Day and the Flood:

‘For as were the days of Noah, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. For as in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day when Noah entered the ark, and they were unaware until the flood came and swept them all away, so will be the coming of the Son of Man.’ (Mt 24:37-39)

The point is that, just like the arrival of the Great Flood, no-one knows when the Last Day is going to happen. People are carrying on with their lives as normal. It is an unexpected event. One of the reasons Noah was saved was that he was prepared. He had built an ark. Our ark is the Church, which we enter through Baptism. For us the waters bring life not death. We are ready, and preparation is the key to Jesus’ message. Whenever the Lord comes, we need to be in a fit state to meet Him. 

How do we prepare? By following the advice in the first reading from the prophet Isaiah:

‘O house of Jacob, come, let us walk in the light of the Lord.’ (Isa 2:5)

If we walk in the light of the Lord, then we are not walking in darkness. We live out our faith in our lives, and our moral characters are formed by our behaviour. We become what we do often in our actions.

About sixteen hundred years ago, one of Christianity’s great figures, St Augustine, had been struggling towards the journey of faith. One day, as he sat under a fig tree, he kept hearing a child say, ‘Pick up and read’ (Aug. Conf. 8.29). And so he opened a Bible and read in the Letter to the Romans:

‘Not in revelling and drunkenness, not in debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarrelling and jealousy. But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.’ (Rom 13:13-14)

Drunkenness, fornication, the sort of behaviour often associated with the Christmas Office Party in particular, and the modern society in general, can be dismissed as ‘just a bit of fun’ or of ‘no consequence in the great scheme of things’. However, what we do affects our lives: we become what we do often. The Christian Life is most definitely not a ‘fun-free zone’. Rather, it is a way of being which allows us to be fully alive; doing what we should be doing in the way we should be doing it. Today’s world is filled with examples of the behaviour which St Paul sees as problematic: people being quarrelsome and subject to baser appetites. One need only read a newspaper, look at the Internet, or turn on the television, to see a world which has got things wrong, in which we are not living decently. Our lives, our characters, are formed by what we think and do, by the decisions we make. This is a cumulative process, where we build on the choices we have made in the past. Therefore, we need to start down the right path as soon as possible, or turn back if we have gone astray.

The first reading, from the prophet Isaiah, looks forward to a Messianic Age of peace:

‘and they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.’ (Isa 2:4)

Swords and spears will be turned into agricultural tools for ploughing fields and cultivating vines.They will no longer be used for warfare, but instead for growing grain and grapes, to make bread and wine. These are the very foodstuffs Our Lord takes at the Last Supper, when He institutes the Eucharist. This feast of thanksgiving is the fulfilment of Isaiah’s prophecy, and represents the Messianic Kingdom where love will triumph over violence.

At this time of year, The Church prepares for three comings: the first is our annual commemoration of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem, at Christmas, where the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. The second coming of Christ will be at the end of time, when He will be our Saviour and our Judge. The third coming we prepare for is even nearer. It happens day by day, and week by week, when Christ comes to us in the Eucharist, through His Body and Blood, under the outward forms of Bread and Wine. This is the Feast of the Kingdom, anticipated by the ploughshares and pruning hooks of Isaiah: tools used to help produce Bread and Wine. Isaiah’s prophecy looks forward to the peace of the Messiah and the banquet of Bread and Wine. These are the Foods of the Kingdom, which provide nourishment for our journey of faith, and give us strength and new life in Christ. Jesus comes to us in the Eucharist to fortify us, and to transform us into His likeness; to help us to live out our faith in the whole of our lives.

So, my brothers and sisters in Christ, let us prepare to meet Our Lord by living out our faith, in all aspects of our lives , nourished with Word and Sacrament. The time is short. The time is now. How we live really matters. We need to grow in the Lord, to learn His ways and walk in His paths. As Christians, we are called to live decently and vigilantly, preferring nothing to Christ, and inviting all the world to come to the fullness of life in Him. This is how we prepare for His coming at Christmas and as Our Saviour and Judge. By following Jesus, and being fed by Him, we are restored and healed by Him. And so, on this Advent Sunday, we sing the praise of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, Duw Dad, Duw y Mab, a Duw yr Ysbryd Glân. To whom be ascribed all might, majesty, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Fra Angelico The Conversion of St Augustine, [Musée Thomas-Henry, Cherbourg-en-Cotentin, France]

Advent III – Rejoice!

THIS morning many of us will have opened door №17 on our Advent Calendars. The Countdown to Christmas is well underway and seems to be moving even more quickly this year when Advent is only 3 weeks and 1 day long. There is much to prepare for. Most importantly, as Christians, we joyfully prepare to meet Jesus, both as a baby born in Bethlehem, and as our Saviour and our Judge. During this season our readings focus on both the prophet Isaiah and John the Baptist. This is because they both look to Jesus, as the fulfilment of prophecy: the Messiah, God’s anointed, who will save God’s people from their sins. 

In the Gospels, the religious authorities, the Scribes, Pharisees, and priests, tend to receive a fairly negative portrayal. Much of this is for good reason, but, this morning, I have to admit that I find myself agreeing with their questioning. The Gospel passage set for today takes two passages from the first chapter of St John’s Gospel. The first is quite straightforward. The evangelist writes:

There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. He came as a witness, to bear witness about the light, that all might believe through him. He was not the light, but came to bear witness about the light. 

Yr ydoedd gŵr wedi ei anfon oddi wrth Dduw, a’i enw Ioan. Hwn a ddaeth yn dystiolaeth, fel y tystiolaethai am y Goleuni, fel y credai pawb trwyddo ef. Nid efe oedd y Goleuni, eithr efe a anfonasid fel y tystiolaethai am y Goleuni. (Jn 1:6-8)

John the Baptist is the forerunner, the one who comes to bear witness to Christ, the Light of the World. He proclaims the Good News of God’s Kingdom by calling people to repentance. John calls us all to turn away from our sins, and to turn back to the God who loves us, and will save us. Today’s Gospel then shifts to the interaction between John and representatives from the Temple in Jerusalem:

And this is the testimony of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, “Who are you?” 

A hon yw tystiolaeth Ioan, pan anfonodd yr Iddewon o Jerwsalem offeiriaid a Lefiaid i ofyn iddo, Pwy wyt ti? (Jn 1:19)

At one level John’s response to this question could have been purely factual: ‘I am John, the son of Zechariah the priest’. John would have known Temple priests, being the son of one, and they in turn would have known him. The priests and Levites are interested both in John’s identity and in what he is doing. 

As we heard last week, John has been baptising people in the Jordan. He stationed himself near Bethany where the road from Jerusalem to Jericho meets the Jordan. It is somewhere where you can cross the river, the water is shallow, you and your animals can drink and rest. It is an ideal place to have a break — the first-century equivalent of a motorway service station. John has been preaching repentance, and he has washed people in flowing water, to signify forgiveness. The religious authorities are trying to understand what exactly is going on. The conversation continues:

He confessed, and did not deny, but confessed, “I am not the Christ.” And they asked him, “What then? Are you Elijah?” He said, “I am not.” “Are you the Prophet?” And he answered, “No.” 

Ac efe a gyffesodd, ac ni wadodd; a chyffesodd, Nid myfi yw’r Crist. A hwy a ofynasant iddo, Beth ynteu? Ai Eleias wyt ti? Yntau a ddywedodd, Nage. Ai’r Proffwyd wyt ti? Ac efe a atebodd, Nage. (Jn 1:20-21)

John’s answer is clear. He is neither the Messiah, nor is he Elijah — though he does look somewhat like him. Those questioning the Baptist ask him to explain himself, so that they can tell the religious authorities in Jerusalem who and what he is. In answer John quotes from the Fortieth Chapter of Isaiah, which we heard read last week. 

He said, “I am the voice of one crying out in the wilderness, ‘Make straight the way of the Lord’, as the prophet Isaiah said.” 

Eb efe, Myfi yw llef un yn gweiddi yn y diffeithwch, Unionwch ffordd yr Arglwydd, fel y dywedodd Eseias y proffwyd. (Jn 1:23)

While this might appear a slightly cryptic response, what John is saying is: ‘I am fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy’, in other words: ‘the Messiah is coming!’ This is Good News. It is also the reason why today’s reading from the prophet Isaiah contains the very passage that Jesus reads out in the synagogue at Nazareth at the start of his public ministry (Lk 4:16-19). John the forerunner proclaims that the Messiah is coming, this is a reason to be joyful!

The priests and Levites cannot quite understand what is going on. If John the Baptist is not the Messiah, nor Elijah returned to earth, why then is he baptising people? 

John answered them, “I baptize with water, but among you stands one you do not know, even he who comes after me, the strap of whose sandal I am not worthy to untie.” 

Ioan a atebodd iddynt, gan ddywedyd, Myfi sydd yn bedyddio â dwfr; ond y mae un yn sefyll yn eich plith chwi yr hwn nid adwaenoch chwi: Efe yw’r hwn sydd yn dyfod ar fy ôl i, yr hwn a aeth o’m blaen i; yr hwn nid ydwyf fi deilwng i ddatod carrai ei esgid.(Jn 1:26-27)

John sees himself as not even worthy to untie his cousin Jesus’ sandals, something that a servant would do. He is a model of humility. The Baptist does not seek power or prestige, all he wants is to do is God’s will. Christ is unknown to the religious authorities, and to all who do not follow Him. But we know Him and love Him, as Our Lord and Saviour, and we wait for His coming filled with joy and expectation. 

Even in the depth of winter, we know that God is someone whom we can trust, who keeps His promises. Our Heavenly Father offers the world the greatest present we could ever hope for: true love and eternal life. Today, the peace which the Messiah came to bring seems as elusive as ever, with the human capacity to create misery in the most dreadful ways continuing relentlessly. We know that humanity still has some considerable distance to travel. One possible answer is to embrace the need for repentance: to change our hearts and minds and to follow Christ. We also prepare to meet Him as He will come again, as our Saviour and our Judge. It is a daunting prospect, yet we know and trust that Jesus saves us. By His Wounds on the Cross we are healed, our sins are forgiven. 

As Christ’s followers we rejoice in a God who loves us, who heals us, and who and restores us. In Him, and through Him, we are given real hope for the future. In the midst of human pain and sorrow we can place all our hope and trust in God, who both loves us, and saves us. We draw close to Jesus in His Word, and in the Sacrament of the Altar. Today we are fed with His Body and Blood, so that we can be sanctified by God, and share in his divine life and joy.

Like Jesus and John the Baptist, may we be filled with the Holy Spirit. Let us proclaim God’s Truth so that all the world may come to believe and trust in Him. May we, this Advent time and always, sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

John the Baptist: 12th cent. Mosaic in Cappella Palatina di Palermo

The First Sunday of Advent

THE recent changes to speed limits on the roads in Wales have made everyone who drives much more interested in reading road signs. Gone are the old certainties, and instead we are left unsure. Not long ago things used to be relatively simple, now they have become far more complex. At times, it can be hard to know exactly what speed we are supposed to be doing, and we can end up concentrating more on the signs than on the road ahead. This situation is far from ideal, but in some ways it mirrors the confusion and lack of certainty that many Christians feel regarding the second coming of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. But we are given signs to follow.

The season of Advent begins today. Four weeks of preparation, of getting ready. At this time of year the Church prepares to meet Christ in two ways. Firstly, in the annual celebration of His Birth at Christmas, and also by preparing for His Second Coming as our Saviour and our Judge. During the four weeks of Advent the Liturgy encourages us to ponder the Four Last Things: Death, Judgement, Heaven, and Hell. It is important to think about such things. Our earthly lives are finite, but afterwards we have an eternal destiny. Christians believe that Jesus was born, lived, died, and rose again to give us the hope of eternal life in Him. In the grand scheme of things, what really matters are our lives and our souls: who we are, what we are, what we do, and where our motivations come from.

Our readings over the last few weeks have been preparing us for the change of season with their focus on judgement and Our Lord’s Return. They highlight a paradox. We do not know when Christ will return, but we are told that the signs will be clear. 

Jesus says:

“But concerning that day or that hour, no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. Be on guard, keep awake. For you do not know when the time will come.” (Mk 13:32-33)

There is no way that we can know exactly when Jesus will return, so all we can do is be vigilant and be alert. We can live lives that demonstrate our readiness by living out our faith, here and now, every single day. We have only one life to live here on Earth, and we must try, with God’s grace, to do the best we can. In today’s world, the idea of living for today is frequently seen as more important than caring about what will happen to us when we die. However, as Christians, we know that how we live our lives matters not just for today, but for eternity. Jesus calls all people to repentance — to turn around and change the whole of their lives and follow Him in their thoughts, their words, and their deeds. We need to follow Jesus’ teachings for the Kingdom of God is close at hand.

What matters is not when Our Lord returns, but whether we are ready to meet him, when that day comes. The words of Isaiah from this morning’s first reading can help us. The prophet is looking forward to the redemption of Israel, the coming of the Messiah, and a new future after exile. Against a picture of human sin, and rebellion against God, there is the implicit possibility of something better. God has plan, a plan for good things, and this plan is for our well-being, brought about through Jesus. Isaiah is convinced of both the power and the love of God, to remake us, and restore us, to enrich us with His grace.

We are not left alone in all this. God both tells us the nature and source of the problem, and provides us with a solution. He helps us along our way: strengthening and encouraging us to turn our lives around, and follow Him. Jesus instructs us to be vigilant, to keep awake, and be ready to greet Him, when He comes.

Our Lord will return, and we look forward to this as each year we celebrate His first coming as a baby in Bethlehem. The prophet Isaiah eagerly anticipates the Incarnation, when he asks God:

‘Oh that you would rend the heavens and come down,’ (Isa 64:1)

This is exactly what God does at the Annunciation, when Mary conceives through the power of the Holy Spirit, so that He can be born in Bethlehem. Christ comes among us, as a weak and vulnerable child, to show all humanity that we are loved and valued. His birth demonstrates that healing and reconciliation are possible. Scripture is fulfilled, and we can have hope for the future. Christmas, Christ’s birth, should fill us with joy, and wonder. What greater present could we offer to the Infant Jesus than hearts filled with love and lives lived in the true freedom proclaimed by the Gospel. At one level, it doesn’t matter when the Second Coming is. What matters is living lives infused with the values of the Kingdom of God, here and now.

Christ’s first coming in Bethlehem was proclaimed through signs, in the prophecy of Isaiah and others. The star proclaimed the Messiah’s birth, guiding wise men from the East. In a similar way, Our Lord’s Second Coming will be announced in the celestial realms:

“But in those days, after that tribulation, the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken. And then they will see the Son of Man coming in clouds with great power and glory. And then he will send out the angels and gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven.” (Mk 13:24-26)

When Jesus comes the signs will be clear, just as the fig tree heralds the start of summer. God gives us signs so that we can be sure and ready to meet Him when He comes.

This Advent, God asks us, to turn our lives around, and prepare ourselves to meet our Lord, just as He meets us today. We encounter Him at the altar in His body and blood, in His words proclaimed in Scripture, in the yearly remembrance of His Nativity, and in His coming in glory as our Saviour and our Judge. God was prepared to go to any length to meet us, to be with us, and to heal us. In turn we need to prepare ourselves, our souls and our lives to meet Him. We do this so that we may be united with Him forever. In anticipation of this day we sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.

Michelangelo The Last Judgement, Sistine Chapel

The Second Sunday before Advent: Mk 13:1-8

There was a time when you would see men walking around with sandwich boards, which declared, ‘The End is Nigh!’ It would be all too easy to mock them, or write them off as crackpots. They do, however, make a serious point. For all Christians, after Jesus’ Ascension, we are waiting for Jesus to come again, as our Saviour and our Judge. It might be today, or in a thousand years from now, but He is coming, and we need to be ready. We need to be prepared to meet Him. It is why, in the Season of Advent, which will soon be upon us, we consider the two comings of Jesus. The first is as a baby born in Bethlehem, the second will be as Our King, Our Saviour and Our Judge. The two comings are linked, and we need to be ready for both. 

People nowadays are worried by many things: Britain’s departure from the EU, the President of the United States of America, the threat of nuclear war, global climate change, the end of the world. The latter part of the twentieth century and the start of the twenty-first are full of dire warnings of impending doom. It’s scary stuff, it really is. But as Christians we know that whatever happens, we are loved by and saved by God, that we, and all things are in His hands. It can be hard to hold onto hope like this, but we can. 

The buildings of the Temple complex were soon to be destroyed by the Romans. The single most holy place in the world for Jews was about to be destroyed. It’s a frightening prospect, but it teaches an important lesson: not to be overly concerned with the stuff of this world, as it isn’t as important as we tend to make it. The disciples can’t quite understand that yet, but they will, in time.

What’s more important for Jesus is that the disciples aren’t led astray into strange beliefs, or following false Christs. The last two thousand years have seen some very strange versions, some might say perversions, of Christianity. What we believe matters, because it affects how we live our lives, it helps us give right praise to God, rather than something distorted, ugly and man-made. When Mark wrote his Gospel there were lots of strange ideas floating around about Jesus, and there still are today. It was a time of great uncertainty then, as now. There were wars and natural disasters which portend the end times. Christians were facing persecution then, and they are now too, all over the world. We are more likely to face indifference than persecution, but it knocks your confidence somewhat. You want hope and comfort, and the promise of something better. 

And we have that in Jesus Christ, who died for our sins, and who rose again to show us that we have the promise of eternal life with God, ‘For by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are sanctified’ (Heb 10:14). This is truly good news to a troubled world. It is the heart of our faith, and the source of our joy. Peter and Andrew, James and John want to know when it will take place. Jesus doesn’t tell them, but he gives them signs to be alert for, so that they can be ready.

I wasn’t a boy scout, but their motto ‘Be Prepared’ is a good one, especially for Christians, because Jesus is coming, and we need to be ready to meet Him. It is good to think about this as we prepare to enter Advent, the penitential season which looks towards Christmas, and our yearly celebration of Jesus’ birth. It is truly amazing thing, that God should be born as one of us, to save us from our sins, to give us the hope of Heaven. We need to prepare for it, because it is important: not the turkey and tinsel and the rampant consumerism, but the Incarnation of the Word of God. It changes the world, and has been doing so for the last two thousand years. We also know that Jesus will come to judge the world. It’s tricky that one, knowing that we will be called to account for what we have been, said, thought, and done.None of us deserve to go to Heaven, but God is loving and merciful, and forgives our sins when we are penitent, He gives us another chance when we make a mess of it. We keep doing it, and God keeps forgiving us, so that we can try to do what God wants us to do. I find such generosity staggering. The world around us can be judgmental, it likes to write people off as no good, as failures. Thankfully God isn’t like that, and the church shouldn’t be either. We have to be a community of healing and reconciliation, so that we can offer the world an alternative. It is both liberating and exciting to that you and I are part of it, and hopefully we want others to be as well. 

This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, says the Lord: I will put my laws on their hearts, and write them on their minds,’ (Heb 10:16). The author of the Letter to the Hebrews quotes Jeremiah (31:33) to show us how Scripture is fulfilled in the Person of Jesus, who makes a new covenant with His Precious Blood on Calvary. God makes it possible for us to live this new life, triumphing over sin and death. Christ does this for us, what can we do for Him?

We can be ready to meet Him, and we can live the life He wants us to live, not worry whether Christ will come tomorrow or in a thousand years.