To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 40:1-5,9-11; 2 Peter 3:8-15; Mk 1:1-8
Our God is coming. He is
coming to save and redeem. The time of exile – the long separation of humankind
from God, from one another and from nature because of sin – is about to end.
This is the good news proclaimed in today’s liturgy.
The second Book of Isaiah
begins at Chapter 40 and is known as the Book of Consolation. It was written at
a time when Israel was still in exile in Babylon. Isaiah is speaking to a
captive people. Israel’s Babylonian captors were conquered themselves by Cyrus
and Persia. Cyrus celebrated his victory by releasing the peoples who had been
conquered by the Babylonians. So when Isaiah spoke of comfort and the glory of
the Lord being revealed, the captives celebrating their release could readily
imagine a return to the better days of their history when God had felt closer.
God had indeed come not to scatter but to gather, as a shepherd gathers his
sheep. Isaiah saw Cyrus as God’s instrument to release his people from
captivity and allow them their freedom.
The Psalmist, like
Isaiah, celebrates God’s initiative in redeeming his people and proclaiming
peace upon them. He is confident that God’s initiative will result in the whole
of creation bringing forth plenty.
This, however, was seen
by the first Christian community as only one of many acts in a long line of
saving acts that would culminate and find its fulfillment in the decisive act
of sending his only Son. The Gospel of Mark begins by announcing this fact in
the first verse itself. Mark’s Gospel is a Gospel not only about Jesus Christ,
the Son of God but also Jesus’ Gospel or good news. This good news is that in
him God will save all peoples everywhere. This salvation will be not merely
from the physical bondage of being oppressed by foreigners in a foreign land
but will touch every aspect of life. It will be a kind of salvation never
experienced before.
In order to prepare for
this salvation, John the Baptist comes into the wilderness and begins his
proclamation like Isaiah had done centuries before. In the Bible the desert or
wilderness means a place of encounter with God. It was in the desert that the
people of Israel met God and learnt the ways of God. There they became God’s
own people and the Lord became their God. Jesus, before beginning his public
ministry, spent forty days and nights in the desert or wilderness. It was a
time of discovering and deepening his personal relationship with God. By
calling the people into the wilderness desert), John was calling them to let go
of their false hopes and securities and learn to hope and trust in God alone.
Isaiah and John did their
task. They did what they were required to do. They have completed the mission
entrusted to them. They prepared the way of the Lord, they made his paths
straight.
The disciples of Jesus
continued the mission of preparing the way of the Lord, as is evident in the
second reading of today in which Peter exhorts his readers to continue to
prepare for the coming of the Lord. They must not be discouraged at the delay
in the coming of the Lord. This delay is simply to give his people time to
repent. As they look forward to the coming of the Lord it must not be a looking
forward with fear or anxiety, because creation will be transformed in a ‘new
heaven and new earth’, in which all the things that are held dear will be
filled with the righteousness, or incomparable goodness, of God’s ways. The
Lord is patient and understanding and wants all to be saved.
These images of hope,
promise, and renewal remind us that human obedience, walking in the way of the
Law, is a proper response to God’s grace. We do not build the highway and then
wait for God to come. God has already drawn near to us before we repent. Our
repentance is not a condition but a consequence of God’s drawing near to us.
The readings make it clear that we are preparing for no less than the coming of
God’s son yet again into our world and our lives. During this Advent season, we
need to repent that we humans have not responded to God’s offer, as we should.
Therefore peace, justice and security remain illusive. Dishonesty, corruption
and greed still beset us. This is why we care called to make the kingdom that
he inaugurated a reality even today. That is what we prepare for and work for,
today, and every day, here, and wherever we are.
Yet God continues to come
into such a world much like he came two thousand years ago. He continues to
challenge us to remain as positive as we can be. He continues to call us to
selflessness, generosity, honesty and love even amidst the negative of this life.
He was not recognized by most of the people when he first came, will we
recognize him when he comes now?
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