Thursday, December 16, 2021

 Thursday of the Third Week of Advent

(Isaiah 54:1-10; Luke 7:24-30)

It took a Lincoln to call a “day of national humiliation, fasting and prayer.”  Statespersons today will not recognize a national sin nor see a purpose in asking God’s forgiveness.  Yet liberals berate the country for racism and conservatives for abortion.  Perhaps it is a waning belief in God that causes the reluctance to repent.  Christians should not be so recalcitrant.

Today’s first reading from Isaiah expresses God’s mercy to Israel.  It has spent scores of years in exile where it acknowledged its sins.  God seems anxious to take back the nation as His beloved.  In today’s gospel Jesus recognizes the Baptist’s role in calling for a similar change of heart.  He describes John as “more than a prophet” because John announces the Messiah’s coming.  Of course, Jesus fills this role by showing God’s prodigious love for all.  

In a sense Advent is a time of repentance.  We may not delineate personal sins as in Lent although any time is right for this practice.  But it is the apt time to recognize social sins like the vestiges of racism and licensing abortion.  After a common penance, we will have more reason to celebrate Christ’s coming.