Entering into Advent, today is almost a “new year” in the liturgical calendar of the Church. The three readings speak about “time”. The prophet Isaiah in the First Reading prophesied about a time of peace when swords will become ploughshares, spears into pruning hooks and nation will not raise sword against nation. In the second reading St. Paul reminds us that this is the time to choose life rather than death, light rather than darkness in the way we live our lives.
The gospel this Sunday reminds us about the coming of the Son of Man! Jesus points to the time of Noah when people lived their lives without knowing the impending deluge. Except for the family of Noah in the ark, they all perished. Just like the deluge, the Lord will also come at unexpected time so He urges us to be awake at all time. Just like a thief can break into a house anytime, we have to be on guard!
From the moment we were born we entered into time and we are given a timeline to spend for the rest of our lives; some short, some longer depending on the mission entrusted to us. We say time is gold because it is up to us to turn time into something precious. Therefore time is of great value that we do not want to waste away. Given as a gift, time is an opportunity not just to develop ourselves into the being that God envisages us to be but to optimize our giftedness as well. As a gift, we have the corresponding responsibility to re-create it through our concrete acts of selfless giving. Since Christ entered into time He transforms history into a pilgrimage and continuous to incarnate Himself in the world He had created. During His lifetime, He re-created creation by
un-selfing Himself hence transforming the world into a sacred space for humanity to live in. “In the same way that Christ gives incarnate expression to divine self-surrender, so too must participation in Christ result in concrete acts of selfless giving” (Hans Urs von Balthasar).
In appreciation for the time that is entrusted to us, the best way to spend it is to give away ourself as a gift to others just like Christ who poured out totally Himself as a gift to us.
To be awake is to break away from self-enclosure into self-surrender as expressed by the Church in her mission to outpour herself out for the world. Advent brings us into that readiness to face God when we share ourselves totally to others without reserve. When that happens then we are ready to meet the Immanuel who continues to indwell in us in the here and now of our existence.
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