April 6, 2018 at 1:53 p.m.
ADVENT REFLECTION
Week IV: Announcing the coming of Jesus
Not surprisingly, the prayers, music and readings at the Mass also have this atmosphere of breathless anticipation. The prayer after communion for this Sunday can sum up our thoughts and feelings well: "We pray, almighty God, that as the feast day of our salvation draws ever nearer, so we may press forward all the more eagerly to the worthy celebration of the mystery of Your Son's nativity."
One of the unique features of the liturgy during the last week of the season of Advent is the singing or reading of what are called the great "O antiphons," as heard in our Advent carol, "O Come, O Come Emmanuel." Each of these short antiphons or prayers describes the nature of the Messiah and His coming.
One speaks of the Messiah as the wisdom and holy Word of God who governs all creation with strong, yet tender care. Another sings of the Messiah as the radiant dawn, spendor of eternal light, who shines on those who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death. Then there is the one we may know the best, which describes the Messiah as "Emmanuel" ("God with us"), king and lawgiver, desire of the nations, Savior of all people, who comes to set us free.
If you can, look again at that Advent carol and spend a little bit of time in prayer reflecting on what each of the descriptions says and what they might mean.
At Mass on the fourth Sunday of Advent, our Gospel is always about one of the annunciations made in preparation for the coming of the Messiah. In a way, there is more than one annunciation Gospel: As we are in Year B of our three-year cycle, this time around we hear the most familiar annunciation: the annunciation of the archangel Gabriel to Mary.
In Year A, we would read about the angel of the Lord appearing to St. Joseph in a dream and telling him to take Mary for his wife. Next year (Year C), we will have the Gospel of the visitation, when Mary goes to meet her kinswoman Elizabeth. Elizabeth recognizes the mother of her Lord and St. John the Baptist leaps for joy in his mother's womb - both, therefore, announcing that the Messiah is near.
These wonderful annunciation Gospels are not only about the events that led up to the birth of Jesus at Christmas. They also invite us to think about our response to this annunciation of the good news of salvation.
Like St. Joseph, we can be open to God's messengers, however they may come to us and to respond to those messages as St. Joseph did in love and obedience: "He did as the angel of the Lord commanded him" (Matthew 1:24).
Like our Blessed Mother, we can and should enter into a dialogue with the Lord ("How can this be?") and then say "yes" to what He asks of us: "Be it done to me according to Your Word" (cf. Luke 1:38).
Like the Gospel of the visitation, we can imitate Mary, who was blessed because she believed what was spoken to her by the Lord would be fulfilled and because her soul magnified the Lord (cf. Luke 1:41-46).
We can also be like Elizabeth, who was open to being filled with the Holy Spirit, so that she then recognized the presence of God (Luke 1:41-43).
As the season of Christmas fast approaches, let us indeed give great thanks for the coming of Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Let us remember that our celebrations are ultimately about what Jesus came and did for us: Christmas and Easter are closely bound together!
The opening prayer for the Mass this Sunday puts it so well: "Pour forth, we beseech you, O Lord, your grace into our hearts; that we to whom the incarnation of Christ, your Son, was made known by the message of an angel, may by His Passion and Cross be brought to the glory of His Resurrection."
(FatherĀ BarrattĀ is pastor of St. Ambrose parish in Latham. He holds a doctorate in theology and was a professor at St. John's Seminary in England before coming to the U.S. in 2004.)[[In-content Ad]]
250 X 250 AD
250 X 250 AD
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250 X 250 AD
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