"Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." Matthew 3:2
There is an old riddle that goes like this. What first walks on four, then
on two, and then on three legs? The answer: man. As an infant he crawls, as
a man he walks erect, and when old he uses a cane.
Every great culture and every great religion known to mankind has recognized
that there is a cycle to life. Autumn, in which we find ourselves now, sees
nature dying, passing through an inevitable death in winter, only to be
resurrected in the spring and come to full flourish in the summer. It is a
cycle that reflects itself in every living thing, be it animal or plant. The
Church in its extraordinary wisdom recognizes this cycle too.
The Church gives us the liturgical year. The purpose is simple. The cycle of
the Church year is to recall the cycle of the life and work of Jesus Christ.
Advent begins that cycle, placing before us the preparation for Jesusı
coming. Isaiah in the first reading takes us to the beginnings: "On that
day, a shoot shall sprout from the stump of Jesse, and from his roots a bud
shall blossom" (Isaiah 11:1). Jesse was the father of King David, and Jesus
came from King Davidıs line. "On that day, the root of Jesse, set up as a
signal for the nations, the Gentiles shall seek out, for his dwelling shall
be glorious" (Isaiah 11:10). Christmas will continue that cycle, along with
Epiphany, when the Gentile kings will "seek out" and find the "dwelling" of
God in Jesus. Then through Lent, as nature prepares for second birth, we
will join Jesus in the desert and await His redeeming death and resurrection
at Easter. Jesus will return to His fatherıs side, as He promised He would
do, and the Holy Spirit will descend at Pentecost to confirm the work of the
Church in continuing Jesusı presence in the world in a great sunlit summer.
The liturgical year of the Church is genius. Centered around the Eucharist,
the Church takes us by the hand and leads us through the cycle of Jesusı
birth, life, death and resurrection. Cycles are nothing new. Man has
observed that nature has a cycle since the beginning of recorded time. What
is different is that Jesus returns the cycle to life.
He says it Himself: "I am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in
me, even if he dies, will live" (John 11:25).
Jesus is life. He spoke of himself as the vine with us the branches. Apart
from Him, we die. He spoke of a life that like a grain of wheat must die in
order to live. He spoke of our eating His flesh and drinking His blood in
order to have not just life but eternal life. He spoke about a life that
would never end, a cycle that would reach its fulfillment. Though human
beings ripen, age, and die, there is more to life than natureıs cycle. There
is ultimate meaning. For this ultimate end, for this breaking of the cycle,
Jesus chose as His image the harvest. At the harvest only one thing would
matter, whether or not we had born fruit.
"Produce good fruit as evidence of your repentance," Jesus says in the
Gospel of today (Matthew 3:8). When the axe is laid to the root of the
trees, only one thing will matter.
We very much live in the midst of what Pope John Paul II called the culture
of death. The world at times appears to have gone mad. The family is
dissolving before our eyes. The pursuit of pleasure without conscience
continues to lead us down a path to total alienation. The separation of the
sexual act from procreation has made the most intimate of human acts nothing
more than entertainment. Principles have been completely made relative. Man
seems not to know what truth is. In the words of T. S. Eliot, "We are the
hollow men/ We are the stuffed men" (The Hollow Men). Poets, the good ones
at least, are sensitive enough to perceive what is going on.
In the face of our self-deception and self-destruction, Jesus has the
courage to say, "Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?" (Matthew
3:7). He calls us to genuine and true repentance. The warnings of Advent
make sense in this context. Prepare the way, stay awake, keep alert, repent.
These are harvest expressions. There will come a time when the cycle will
end, justice will be done, the world and its folly will be proved to be what
it is, nonsense. Only life will remain. The harvest will be accomplished,
and we shall do what Jesus first did. The cycle will end, and we shall live.
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