Preparing the Way: The Nativity
The third reflection, on the Nativity, the third Joyful Mystery, was given by Br. Gregory Pearson OP and is now available in this pre-recorded video for readers who could not join us.
Labels: advent2009, preaching
Labels: advent2009, preaching
These two animals are the ox and the donkey, and we find them in Nativity scenes in church and in Christian art, and we mention them in carols and liturgical songs. Yet, there is no mention of these beasts in the Gospels themselves. The only animals mentioned in the infancy narratives are the flock over which the shepherds watched (Luke 2:8). Why, then, are they given such prominence in our liturgical and artistic tradition? And why did St Francis of Assisi - who 'invented' the first Crib scene as a devotional tableau - specifically ask that Christ be depicted in his crib between an ox and a donkey? Is this just further evidence of his reputed love for animals?Labels: advent2009
Labels: advent2009, preaching
Labels: advent2009, preaching
In today's readings we see the promise and fulfilment of the good things that God has prepared for those who love him. As the nativity of Our Lord draws ever closer, the readings seek to make us aware of the closeness of the Lord to his people and how great the things are that he will do for them.Labels: advent2009
ree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be enrolled ... and all went to be enrolled, each to his own city” (Luke 2:1, 3).Labels: advent2009
Matthew's gospel tells us about Herod's interest in the birth of Jesus, a fact of which he becomes aware when the Magi visit him in Jerusalem. Ironically, he is the one who tells them that Bethlehem is the likely place of the child's birth and encourages them to go, find him, and return so that he too can come and worship this new king. We all know that this is not his real intention and that the massacre of the innocent children of Bethlehem is his real response to the birth of Jesus. Although the New Testament is the only historical witness to this event it is not unlikely considering the brutality and paranoia of Herod. He had, after all, been declared 'King of the Jews' by the Roman Senate about forty years before the birth of Jesus. Anybody who might even vaguely represent a threat to his position would therefore be ruthlessly eliminated.Labels: advent2009
Labels: advent2009, preaching
It is noteworthy that Gabriel is the messenger who explains the end times, for he appears again in Luke's gospel. The 'time of the end', of which Gabriel speaks, comes to pass when the Word becomes flesh in the womb of the Virgin Mary. For, as St Paul says, "when the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman" (Galatians 4:4). And Hebrews says that "in these last days God has spoken to us by a Son" (Hebrews 1:2). Thus, at the end of time itself, God sends his messenger Gabriel to announce his word once more to His people, who are represented not by Daniel, a son of man, but by the Virgin Mary, whom the Church's liturgy (citing the book of Judith) calls "the highest honour of our race". And Gabriel announces the Word Himself, for once the Virgin gives her 'yes' to God's message from Gabriel, she conceives the Word Incarnate by the power of the Holy Spirit. In this way, the word that was spoken to her by Gabriel is truly fruitful and preeminently finds a home within her as the Word.Labels: advent2009
One feels an immediate sympathy for Zechariah and Elizabeth. Something about the portraits that Luke sketches in just a few verses in the first chapter of his Gospel immediately resonates with our own experience. It has an authentic feel to it. Zechariah and Elizabeth are depicted as an upright and pious couple that long for a child, yet none has come. It seems like their faithfulness and devotion has been in vain.Labels: advent2009
St. John of the Cross was born at Hontoveros, Old Castile, on 24 June 1542 to a family of poor silk weavers and grew up knowing great hardship and poverty. His father, who was from a wealthy family but was disinherited after marrying beneath his rank, died at the prime of his youth and left his wife widowed with only her eldest son to assist her in providing the most basic necessities for her family. He was able to attend a Jesuit school, after the governor of the Hospital of Medina took him into his service. It was in that city that he entered the Carmelite Order and was told in prayer that he was to bring the Order back to its ancient perfection. After profession he obtained permission from his superiors to follow the primitive Carmelite rule, without the mitigations that had been granted by various Popes since its foundation in 1155. After meeting St. Teresa of Avila, he resolved to help her in establishing a priory of Carmelite friars who would live out the austerities of the primitive rule. These reformed friars came to be known as Discalced, because of their custom of going barefoot or wearing sandals instead of shoes. The reform spearheaded by Teresa and John spread rapidly but not without great suffering on John's part, as he was imprisoned and greatly mistreated when he refused to give up the reformed way of life. He was able to resist the order of his provincial without disobedience, since he held his office of spiritual director and confessor to the Carmelite nuns in Avila not from the Order but from the Apostolic Delegate. St. John's life of great austerity and mystical contemplation is a reminder to all Christians, and religious especially, that we need to be challenged, in the way we live our lives, to return to the evangelical counsels of prayer, fasting and almsgiving, since the Way of the Cross will not always bring us material comforts.The painting of the Crucifixion above is by Salvador Dali and was inspired by a sketch made by St. John.
Labels: advent2009, saints

Does this festival however hold any significance for Christians? We know from the Gospel of John that Our Lord celebrated this feast in Jerusalem, but we are under no obligation or “law” to celebrate any of the Jewish festivals given to Israel.Labels: advent2009
ay in which we are exhorted to rejoice, and it is a reminder that words are not always cheap and superficial. Words can cut deep into us. John the Baptist called the multitudes who came to be baptized 'a brood of vipers' – hardly words that are consoling, but these words sunk deep into his listeners. They were shaken out of their complacency and they woke up to something that deep down they already knew – their relationship with other people is important. It is important that people should share, that they shouldn't exploit each other or make false accusations. Such rules are essential for a community to flourish. But this isn't all there is to John's message. It is only a preparation for something far greater.Labels: advent2009
John the Baptist, as we have seen, had the special mission of being the Forerunner of the Christ, 'going ahead of the Lord to prepare his way' (Luke 1: 76). This mission began at his very conception, when Elizabeth miraculously conceives in her old age, pointing towards the miraculous events of the Annunciation and Incarnation: indeed, the angel Gabriel uses Elizabeth's conception as an example for Mary that 'nothing is impossible to God' (Luke 1: 37). Elizabeth, too, recognises that her conception is a miraculous gift of God: 'the Lord has done this for me' she says (Luke 1: 25). Later on, when, Mary goes to visit her, Elizabeth becomes the first to recognise, in response to the sign of the baby in her womb, the blessedness of Mary, and of the child she bears: her openness to recognising the working of God in her own life enables her to see and understand the 'great things' he has done for Mary (cf. Luke 1: 49)Labels: advent2009
St. John the Baptist is the bridge between the Old Covenant and the New Covenant that is found in the person of Jesus Christ. He is the last of the Prophets and the first of the disciples. Even in the womb, this great saint, called by God to be the "prophet of the Most High; who will go before the Lord to prepare his ways", recognised the Messiah within the womb of his blessed mother and jumped with joy. John's whole life was geared towards the unique ministry of preparing the world for Christ. He is the Elijah promised by God in the Book of Malachi and recognised by Our Lord as the Elijah who has already come to herald the arrival of the Messiah. Within the Eastern Churches he is often depicted with the wings of an angel to symbolise his role as the first messenger of the Word made flesh. As Advent progresses we are called once again to hear the voice of the one crying in the wilderness and prepare the way of the Lord. We are called to imitate him: to leap with joy and rejoice in our Saviour, and to proclaim His coming into the world, and the salvation this brings, to the whole of creation until He comes again in glory.Labels: advent2009
Throughout Advent the voice of Isaiah echoes down to us with a prophetic zeal and eloquence that is profound, moving and uplifting. Often referred to as the Gospel of the Old Testament, or the Fifth Gospel, Isaiah resonates strongly for us at this time, foretelling the coming of our Saviour and assuring us of our hope for salvation.Labels: advent2009
In the Old Testament, we have many things about the prophets. There are tales of their lives, and accounts of their writings. We can see then how the prophets are an important part of the history of salvation, because they made God's message known to the people through what they said, what they did, and what they wrote. They were a sign of the fact that God was with his people, and that he desired to make himself know to his people, so that they might follow in his ways. Labels: advent2009, preaching
It is often noted that pregnant mothers have a certain radiance and 'glow' about them, physically attributed to the extra flow of blood around their bodies. But of course, it is well to think that this is a beautiful external sign of the inner joy that an expectant mother experiences in her spirit as new life grows and develops within her womb. During Advent, the Church focuses her attention on several persons, and one of these is a pregnant mother, who is not just aglow with joy and her pregnancy, but also beautiful and radiant with divine grace.
Seen in this light, then, the feast of the Immaculate Conception rightly celebrates the full meaning of Mary being hailed by the angel as kecharitōmenē. So, as a 4th-century Marian antiphon that is used for the feast of the Immaculate Conception puts it: tota pulchra es, Maria, "you are all beautiful, Mary, and the original stain [of sin] is not in you. You are the glory of Jerusalem, you are the joy of Israel, you give honour to our people". Mary is beautiful, pleasing, attractive, because she is made full of grace, and we rightly rejoice in this and are grateful to God that she was made graceful from her very beginning. For through her and the fruit of her womb, Jesus, we too can be made full of grace, we too are rendered pleasing to God and receive his divine favour. Labels: advent2009
St. Ambrose was born ca. 340 AD probably at Trier to one of the most prominent families in the Empire, his father being prefect of Gallia. He grew up in an atmosphere of great piety and devotion, mostly influenced by his widowed mother and his sister, who went on to take the veil of virginity and subsequently became a nun. It was from this sister that he acquired his great respect and esteem for virginity and his sense of its value.Labels: advent2009
In Advent we are called to enter a period of joyful expectation and preparation and the readings for this second Sunday really reflect this. In different ways they radiate a sense of joy, hope and praise. It is true but sad that our world can often seem a hard, dark and lonely place. At different points on our journey the painful truth of just how vulnerable, weak and limited human beings are is brought home to us. While very often we like to think of ourselves as powerful and strong, circumstances will often shatter this illusion and bring us down to earth with a bang. Bereavement, suffering, selfishness, arrogant pride too often mark our human experience. The current recession has been yet another painful reminder of this when we see that those who greedily chased after wealth and power without any regard for the greater good, and seemed like the gods of a new age of human progress, have now been exposed as sadly misguided and not so almighty after all. Global warming also reminds us that we are not masters of all we survey.Labels: advent2009
kness, and the darkness has not overcome it. It seems rather fitting, that as we approach the winter and the darkest days of the year, we prepare for the coming of Christ. The first coming of Christ was also set in darkness – the darkness of a night in Bethlehem, the darkness of a place which would not accommodate a young pregnant woman, the darkness that ruled over Judea in the form of the tyrant king Herod. Yet it was in this darkness that the light of Christ began to shine – a star rose above Bethlehem, the angels proclaimed God's glory, and the three wise men bowed down to the infant king.Labels: advent2009
The opening of the little window in our Advent calendar was a very solemn family ritual when I was a child, performed just before my brother and I were packed off to bed. As we got closer and closer to Christmas day the knot of excitement in my stomach used to get bigger and bigger ... Advent calendars are often at the heart of little family traditions. For me, this emphasizes the communal dimension of this liturgical season. We, as a community, as a Church, wait in hope for the glorious coming of our Saviour. We count the days, just as Mary, Mother of God and symbol of the Church, must have counted down the days until the birth of her child.
My father once told me that when he became a parent there was not one part of his life that was not compromised. The responsibility of caring for a fragile and delicate human life touched every corner of his world. I think in many ways this is a good image of the spiritual life. Christ breathes new life into our souls. Through baptism we are born anew. We must nourish and care for this new life inside us, and allow the grace of God to fill our entire being.Labels: advent2009
St Francis Xavier, whose feast we keep on 3rd December, was born in 1506 in Spain, but as a young man was sent to Paris to study. There he met a fellow Spaniard, St Ignatius of Loyola, who inspired Francis Xavier and six others of his fellow-countrymen to form the Society of Jesus. Having been ordained a priest in 1537, Xavier was sent as a missionary to India as soon as the Jesuits had been formally approved in 1539. He spent the rest of his life on mission, based in Goa, but travelling all around the Far East, most famously to Japan, where he spent two and a half years, and China, where he was headed when he died on an island just off the Chinese coast in 1552. In the course of his ten years of mission, many spent living in the most basic conditions, he preached the Gospel to many different peoples and converted thousands.Labels: advent2009
One of the most beautiful, familiar and striking traditions of this season is the Advent wreath. Placing lighted candles around a wheel made of foliage during winter had been practised by the pre-Christian Germanic and Scandinavian peoples as a symbol of their hope in the god of light turning “the wheel of the earth” back towards the sun to lengthen the days and restore warmth. As the people of Northern Europe were converted to the faith, this pagan practice was Christianised for obvious reasons: humanity had been "sitting in the darkness and in the shadow of death". Christ comes as “the Light that came into the world” to dispel the darkness of sin and to radiate the truth and love of God. By the Middle Ages this practice had taken on further and more formalised symbolism.
The circular wreath, having no beginning nor end and made up of evergreen leaves, symbolised the eternity, unity and completeness of God and the new everlasting life promised by Christ. The leaves used also pointed to the passion and resurrection of our Lord: the prickly leaves remind us of the crown of thorns; the laurel signifies victory over persecution and suffering; pine, holly, and yew, immortality; and cedar, strength and healing. The four candles represent the four weeks of Advent. One tradition is that each week represents one thousand years, making up the biblical 4,000 years from Adam and Eve until the birth of the Saviour. The colours correspond to the liturgical colours of the season: three violet and one rose (for Gaudete Sunday). In Germany the candles are all red, a custom that is observed in the present Papal household. The Advent wreath is a visual sign of our Advent journey and therefore it has become the practice to light a fifth, white, central candle or the Christ Candle, at the first Mass of Christmas to remind us that the incarnation is at the heart of all our preparation for Christmas.Labels: advent2009
Labels: advent2009
In Germany, we have got lots of these St. Andrew’s crosses. When you go through the country, you can see these red and white crosses everywhere. This is not the expression of a great devotion of this apostle, but St. Andrew’s crosses indicate in my country that vehicles on rails have right of way and that you are approaching a level crossing.Labels: advent2009, saints
Readings: Jer 33:14-16, Ps 25:4-5, 8-9, 10, 14, 1 Thes 3:12-4:2, Lk 21:25-28, 34-36
We start the story of the Church's New Year in a rather odd way. The story reads 'let's start at the very end', because we hear Jesus speaking about what will happen at the end of time. It doesn't make for cheery reading, and we would be forgiven for wanting a more celebratory start for a New Year. But, as the Gospel reminds us, this is no time for drunkenness. Instead we start with some sobering thoughts about what lies ahead.
Starting with the end is a very useful thing. Our lives are always full of goals, ambitions and destinations. They help to shape our lives and give them a sense of purpose. If we set out on a journey we need to know first what we might expect when we get to our destination. Then we can pack and make plans to suit that destination. There's no point taking thermals and a woolly hat if we are going to
With that in mind, the beginning of this New Year is a chance to take stock - to look back at the last year and think about the times when we were a bit drowsy, or of the times when we fell asleep altogether. Then we can draw lessons from those things which can help us to know how we can wake up and pay better attention to the good news that our 'redemption is at hand'.
Labels: advent2009, preaching
Labels: advent2009