Sunday, December 14, 2025

 

THIRD SUNDAY OF ADVENT

(Isaiah 35:1-6,10; James 5:7-10; Matthew 11:2-11)

An ancient tradition calls this third Sunday of Advent “Gaudete Sunday.” Gaudete is Latin for “rejoice.” Now is a time to rejoice because we have reached the midpoint of our waiting for Christmas. For this reason, the priest and deacon wear rose-colored vestments, not the penitential purple of the other Sundays of Advent.

Usually, it’s the second reading that presents the theme of joy on this Sunday, but not this year. We hear the prophet Isaiah in the first reading tell the people of Israel, “Rejoice.” The second reading, from the Letter of James, again encourages the Christian people to be patient in waiting for the Lord. I would like to explore this theme of hope once more.

We Christians have been waiting for the Lord since his resurrection from the dead. We want him to vindicate us for lives of honesty, generosity, and chastity. Our hopes of seeing him are lifted when we hear phrases like “…is near” in the reading from James. We ask ourselves, “When will he arrive?” Clearly, the people to whom James wrote had the same concern. That is why he exhorts them: “Be patient…” It is true that Jesus Christ will return because he has said so. But the day and the hour, as he also says, “…no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father” (24:36).

Patience disposes us to suffer and endure present evils. Waiting is not the worst evil, but we certainly don't like it. In fact, waiting inclines us to commit regrettable acts. You can see impatient drivers on the roads risking their lives and the lives of others by weaving in and out of traffic. Other impatient drivers curse cautious ones, sometimes scandalizing themselves as well as their passengers.

At the root of our dislike for waiting is the tendency to think of ourselves as more important than others. We don't want to endure any inconvenience because we believe ourselves to be superior. We even have difficulty seeing God as more important. We should have learned from our mothers that the world doesn't revolve around us, but around God. As Creator and Sustainer of the universe, we must submit to His will. We can hardly expect Him to submit to ours.

In the Bible, God regularly commands patience. He made Noah wait forty days in the ark with a multitude of smelly animals. He allowed Job to suffer countless severe hardships. As James mentions in today’s reading, the prophets had to suffer terribly with patience. Elijah, for example, had to flee from King Ahab's vengeance, nearly succumbing along the way. Likewise, Jeremiah was thrown into a muddy well in an attempt on his life.

Patience allows us to suffer until we recognize our dependence on God for salvation. It enables us to see that our efforts cannot rescue us from death; only God can do that. It is our faith, purified by suffering endured with patience, that firmly connects us to Him. This reminds me of the film "The Hustler," made years ago.  A young pool player challenges the reigning champion to a game. He loses spectacularly but learns from his defeat. The next time he faces the champion, the young player becomes the new champion. As St. Paul tells the Corinthians, the young man wins "only a crown that withers."  By waiting patiently for Christ, however, we win "an incorruptible crown" (1 Corinthians 9:25).

We may not see Christ's return in the flesh this year. But this does not mean that He will not soon reward our sacrifices to live honest, generous, and chaste lives. He comes to us in every Mass and—one might say—particularly at the Mass on Christmas. There in the midst of our loved ones the peace and joy we experience assures us that our sacrifices are worthwhile. They are absolutely worthwhile.


Friday, December 12, 2025

 

Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe

(Zechariah 2:14-17; Revelation 11:19a.12:1-6.10ab; Luke 1:39-47)

By the Incarnation God became a human in order to raise all humans from sin and death.  It was a singular act that cannot be duplicated.  However, today we celebrate another act of God which resembles in a way the achievement of the Incarnation.  He sent His mother, the Virgin of Guadalupe, to lift up the downtrodden indigenous people of Mexico.

To appreciate the magnitude of this incarnation-like event, we must remember the state of the Mexican nation in 1531.  Ten years previous, the might Aztec nation was defeated by a force of only a few hundred Spanish soldiers.  Of course, it was a plague, which the militia unknowingly carried, that did the most damage.  The people were left powerless but defiant.  They largely wanted no part in the Spaniards’ culture.

 Then the Virgin appeared to Juan Diego Cuauhtlatotzin, one of the few indigenous Catholic converts.  She sent him to the Bishop of Mexico with the order to build a church in her honor.  It was not to be constructed in the city among the rich and influential but in the country where the poor, indigenous people resided.  By “church” she meant not only a physical structure but, more importantly, a community of believers.  When the former was completed, the native people converted en masse.    

By our celebration today we remember not only the appearance of the Our Lady of Guadalupe to the Mexican people, but also God’s lifting of all people who have been beaten down.  Whether humans suffer from disease, war, natural disaster, or poverty, God comes to their aid.  Mary identifies herself with a similar intervention of mercy in today’s gospel.  She openly declares that God has visited her in her humble estate so that she might proclaim his greatness.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

 

Thursday of the Second Week of Advent

(Isaiah 41:13-20; Matthew 11:11-15)

John the Baptist was a fiery preacher in his time.  His reputation was like Jesus’.  But how is he to be considered in relation to the Lord?  Let’s take a look at the Scriptures today.

Isaiah’s vision in the first reading suggests that John was like a threshing sledge that separates grain from its stalk and husk.  John’s preaching is a call to judgment.  It separates good people from the bad -- the useful from the waste.  Jesus has another role.  He gathers the good together, heals them of whatever they suffered in the threshing, and forms them into a church community.  He is like the football coach who takes young athletes and through knowledge and inspiration molds them into a winning team.

We form Jesus’ well-trained team.  We have been tested and instructed to announce the Kingdom of God.  Our words -- never too critical and always very hopeful -- give testimony to the sacrifice and the glory of the Lord Jesus.  He is the one to be followed to have a truly wonderful life.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

 

Wednesday of the Second Week of Advent

(Isaiah 40:25-31; Matthew 11:28-30)

Most of the people who started Christmas shopping early probably feel fatigued these days.  There are so many people to please and so many options to consider that shoppers are bound to grow weary.  Purchasing gifts online has eased the burden.  Of course, buying gifts cards is a way out of the hustle.  Jesus in the gospel today proposes another solution.

He tells the people not to worry.  Their concerns about pleasing one another, even about procuring the necessities of life will be relieved when they rely on him.  “Take my yoke upon you,” he says, “and learn from me.”  His yoke is the law of love – to love God above all and to love one’s neighbor as oneself.  Sharing simple joys with God and neighbor – and not trying to ingratiate oneself with lavish gifts – results in a peaceful life.

Christmas shopping has become a mania that has compromised the meaning of Christmas.  Black Friday attracts more interest than Good Friday.  But Jesus did not come to supplement our wardrobes, much less to jumpstart the economy.  He came to free us from selfishness.  When we spend more time with him in thankful prayer and with others in friendly festivity, we come to know why God became human.

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

 Optional Memorial of Saint Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin

(Isaiah 40:1-11; Matthew 18:12-14)

Picture Mexican natives in the year 1530.  The majority had been endlessly targeted by mighty Aztec warriors seeking blood to propitiate their ruthless gods.  Then even the Aztecs were ravaged by the advent of Spanish conquistadors.  With virulent plagues and firearms they laid waste the tribes of Mexico.

Then in 1531, as if they were the lost sheep in Jesus’ parable today and she the brave shepherd, God sent the Virgin of Guadalupe to rescue the native people.  With the assistance of St. Juan Diego CuaulatoatzĂ­n, she signaled the birth of a mixed-race people.  The new nation incorporated Spain’s Christianity and native devotion in a people both simpatico and strong. 

It is said that Pope St. John Paul II returned to Mexico five times because of his high regard and deep affection for the Mexican people.  Like Juan Diego, their forerunner, they not only proudly proclaim Christ the King but also cherish the Virgin of Guadalupe, his holy Mother.