I wanted to begin by sharing a personal passion of mine. I
don’t know about you, but I really enjoy talking to people about their faith. In
the past few weeks, I had the opportunity to talk with someone who had almost
no background in faith whatsoever. Today it is popular to call such people “nones.”
People who say they have no faith.
When I shared about God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and
about Jesus being fully God and fully man, this person was not shy to say,
“That sounds completely incredible!” They challenged me, “Do you really believe
that?”
This reminded me of something that occurred to me forty
years ago. I was working as summer student for a government agency, and we were
going to live in a remote location in large trailers. When we picked up the
trailers from the yard, everything was in working order except the propane-powered
refrigerators. So we visited a repair shop, the repair technician gave us a
secret method to get them working. We had to remove the units and then lay them
on the ground and rotate them through a series of very specific, but strange
maneuvers—almost like physiotherapy.
The repair technician said, “I know this method sounds
really weird, but trust me it works!” Sure enough, after following his method,
the units came back to life. It struck me that the words he said might apply to
our Gospel this week.
“I know this idea sounds really weird, but trust me it
works!” You see faith is about trust.
As we reflect on our Gospel, once again we see that God became
a little child. We call this the incarnation.
This week we and learn three things from our readings. We
learn, who Jesus is; secondly, why our belief about Jesus matters, and finally,
what our response to this truth should be.
Jesus is God
First, Jesus is God. The child growing in the virgin Mary’s
womb was, as we confess together “conceived by the Holy Spirit.” Joseph is not
literally Jesus’ father. God is the father of this child. Not in the normal
manner of course, but by the Holy Spirit.
St Matthew then quotes Isaiah noting, “the virgin shall
conceive, and bear a son, and you shall name him Emmanuel” The name
Emmanuel means “God with us.” Perhaps this is as puzzling today as it was to the
original Jewish audience. How can a child be God with us?
Not only are the ideas of God becoming man and the virgin
birth puzzling, but in the mind of many, this claim also makes Christianity too
exclusive.
While other religions claim to make you good, and lead you to
God, we are claiming instead that God came to us. God took the initiative. As
St Paul reminds us, “But God proves his love for us in that while we were
still sinners Christ died for us.” (Romans 5:8). Yes, we do search for
God, but he came to us first.
When we come to realize just how radical this claim is, it
is impossible to believe that Christianity is just one-good-religion-among-many
at the religious buffet.
Think about his for a moment, if Jesus is not God as we
claim, then our faith is a lie. Jesus cannot be merely a good man, or a great
teacher, or a prophet, although of course he is all those things, he also
claims to be God.
Why Our Belief about Jesus Matters
So I might ask you all, why is this important? Not only is
Jesus God, but we are told “He will save his people from their sins.” Following
Jesus as his disciple is not merely a good way of life, but the way
to salvation. As Jesus himself says, “I am the way and the truth and the
life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). Living a
good life is admirable, but we must remember that we cannot save ourselves by
our good works.
As St Paul forcefully reminds us, “For by grace you have been saved
through faith; and this is not your own doing, it is the gift of God— not
because of works, lest any man should boast.” (Ephesians 2:8–9). We are
saved by Jesus death on the cross—a free gift of God’s grace, which we receive through
faith, not by our own good works. And of course, this is the constant teaching
of the church.
What our Response Should Be?
So then, I might ask you, how then should we respond to this
truth?
First, we must make a choice. Jesus claims to be God, and
this calls for an all-or-nothing response from us. Is he truly the Lord (as he
claims), or instead perhaps he is a liar, or maybe even a lunatic? If he is not
the Lord, then he cannot be good.
If we have come to believe that Jesus is God, we must then demonstrate
our faith. As St Paul just told us, “For by grace you have been saved through
faith”
What does it mean to be saved “through faith”?
In our second reading, St Paul calls each one of us to “the
obedience of faith” (Romans 1:5). The fathers of Second Vatican Council point
out that the obedience of faith is not, as the word obedience sounds, merely following
the rules, instead something from the heart. We engage our through commitment
and trust. “The obedience of faith” then is the complete submission of our
heart and will to God. Our tradition calls this an act of faith. Our
cooperation in an act of faith is the necessary beginning, and then of course,
our life and actions change as a result. It all starts however, in the heart.
How does this work? Perhaps as we read Sacred Scripture, or
hear it preached, the Holy Spirit moves our hearts, and opens our minds to see
the truth. God intends this inspiration to lead to our joyful assent, to our
“yes” to God. Yet this does not take away our freedom. We still have a choice.
In fact, the obedience of faith or making our own act
of faith is the goal of our joyful expectation in Advent.
Many of us prepare a manger scene in our homes at Christmas to remind us of the Nativity. I invite you today to imagine that this manger is your heart. As we sang in our psalm response, "Let the Lord enter; he is king of glory."
We need to prepare our heart to receive our savior. WE have had many opportunities in the past few weeks for Confession. Preparing our hearts might also require prayer, or perhaps meditating on Sacred Scripture. Above all, it means our “yes” to God in our hearts.
Perhaps some of you feel your heart is unworthy to receive the King? Yet even a humble manger in a stable was his resting place that day. We must remember that God proved his love for us while we were still sinners. The truth is, none of us is worthy to receive him, but out of love, he comes to each of us, if we will open our hearts.
Once again, this idea might still sound weird to some people,
but trust me it works! This Advent may
each of our hearts sing, “O come, O come, Immanuel.”
No comments:
Post a Comment