First Sunday Advent [A] – December 1, 2019 – Matthew 24:37-44
We are entering the season of Advent. This time marks the beginning of the new liturgical year of the Church. The season itself is a preparation for us to welcome the Christmas, the coming of Jesus Christ. The word Advent is coming from the Latin word “Adventus” that simply means “arrival.” The dominant liturgical color will be purple that signifies hope and joyful expectation of the coming of our Savior.
The Church has always taught that there are two comings of Jesus. The first coming was two thousand years ago in Bethlehem, when Jesus was born into the simple family of Joseph and Mary. The second coming will be at the end of time, and nobody knows when it will be. It is the secret of God, and anybody who attempts to predict it is bound to fail.
Particularly, the first Sunday of Advent focuses on the second coming of Jesus. From the reading, we can extract at least two characteristics of this coming. Firstly, there will be judgment and the segregation between the good and the evil. Secondly, the coming will be utterly unexpected like the day of Great Flood in the time of Noah and his family or like a thief at the night. Since there will be a judgment based on our life as well as the unpredictable timing, we are expected to be always ready by persevering doing good.
The purpose of Advent is truly to remind us that God will definitely come, and we are prepared for that coming. How are we going to prepare for Jesus’ coming then?
The answer is unbelievably simple: be holy and keep holy. Surely, it is easier said than done, yet we can learn from the saints (they are called “saints” precisely because they have lived a holy life). Yet, again some of us may say that is just tough to be a saint, and it is almost impossible to be like John Paul II who was the holy Pope, or to be like Mother Teresa of Calcutta who spent her life in slump of India and tirelessly the poor, or like St. Stephen who was stoned to death for preaching Jesus. Indeed, it seems to be unsurmountable if we focus on the greatness of these saints, but truthfully, there are a lot of saints who are living simple lives.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus who spent her quiet and simple life inside a convent once wrote, “Miss no single opportunity of making some small sacrifice, here by a smiling look, thereby a kindly word; always doing the smallest right and doing it all for love.” They are many things we can offer sacrifice in our daily life, like our addiction to cellphone, our obsession to be workaholic, our time for our hobbies, and our tendency to complain. While St. Martin de Porres, a Dominican brother, who spent his life cleaning the convent and serving the poor, shows us that the path of holiness is not always grand, “Everything, even sweeping, scraping vegetables, weeding a garden and waiting on the sick could be a prayer, if it was offered to God.”
The way to prepare Jesus’ second coming is by being holy, and living a holy life can be done in doing ordinary things in love and for God.
Valentinus Bayuhadi Ruseno, OP
