First Sunday in Advent*
In the thirteenth chapter of the letter Saint Paul wrote
to the Christians in Rome he says, "The hour has come ... the night is far
spent, day is near. Let us therefore cast aside the deeds of darkness and put on
the armor of light.
Let us conduct ourselves honorably as in daylight, not
in revelries and drunkenness, without lewdness and debauchery, without quarrels
and dissension.No, put on the Lord Jesus Christ ..."
Advent, accordingly means to get up, to be awake, to
rise from the sleep! What is St. Paul trying to say? What he means by "night" he
expresses clearly through terms such as "revelries, drunkenness, lewdness and
quarrels."
The nighttime orgy with everything it implies is for him
a representation of man in darkness, man asleep. It serves him as an image of
the pagan world as such, a world drowning in materialism, persisting in the
darkness of its blindness to the truth, and half asleep in spite of all its loud
and hectic activity, because it ignores the essentials of our vocations as
human.
The nocturnal orgy of world gone wrong - are we not
compelled to realize, with dismay, how accurately St. Paul describes here our
own times as well, times that are sliding back into
paganism?
To rise from sleep - this means to rise from
conformity with such a world and with such times, courageous in virtue,
courageous in faith to shake off the dream that prevents us from recognizing our
vocation and our highest potential.
The songs of Advent, which we hear ever so often during
these weeks, could perhaps become for us a beacon of light that show us
the way and make us lift up our eyes to acknowledge promises so much greater
than those base on money, power, and pleasure.
To be awake for God and for our neighbor - this is
the meaning of the Advent call to stay wake. Such staying awake finds the light
and makes the world a brighter place.
George H. Kubeck - http://cinopsbegoneblogspot.com -
Sunday, December 1, 2013
* DECEMBER 1ST MEDITATION FROM "CO-WORKERS
OF THE TRUTH" BY JOSEPH CARDINAL RATZINGER, IGANTIUS,
1992
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