Listen to the voices of Advent, maybe they will help balance all
the seeming contradictions. Better still, maybe they will throw off balance what
we have so carefully tried to keep balanced. Our ordered lives need the disorder
of Advent so that we can put aside our biased concepts of order and be more open
to the new order God wants to bring to our lives this season. We should let the
voices speak, hold them in Advent awareness and experience the transformation
they offer us. If anything, Advent promises a change both for us and our world,
a change beyond anything we ourselves can envision or bring about on our own.
Let the Advent preacher listen to the voices of the season.
But it is hard to hear the voices because there is a lot of
background noise. It is the usual noise this time of the year, it starts before
Thanksgiving and gets to a feverish pitch as Christmas Day draws closer. It’s
everywhere this noise: it’s audio and visual, coming to us through the sights
and sounds of television, radio, the malls, newspapers and, of course, through
the Internet. Hard to escape it. Hard to hear the other voices, the Advent
voices that can keep us focused. I am guided in my Advent listening by our
Lectionary’s choice of scripture reading through the season. Let the Advent
preacher be a careful and discerning listener.
On December 28th, in my Roman Catholic tradition, we celebrate
the feast of Holy Innocents. That day, the story of the slaughter of the male
infants is proclaimed in our liturgical celebrations. In one terror-filled
verse, Matthew suggests unspeakable horror for the families of the newborn and
the people of Israel.
"Once Herod realized that he had been deceived by the
astrologers, he became furious. He ordered the massacre of all the boys two
years and under in Bethlehem and its environs making his calculations on the
basis of the date he had learned from the astrologers." (Mt. 2:16)
Though the feast falls just beyond the Advent season, the voices
heard as a result of this brutal act need to be attended to through all of
Advent. Hear them?
They are the cries of agony of all those who have suffered at
the hands of tyrants right up to our day, those who are powerless and cry out to
God to save them. To express their pain, Matthew draws upon the prophet
Jeremiah’s description of Rachel mourning her children. (Jer. 31:15f) From her
tomb in Ramah near Bethlehem, the grieving voice of Rachel is heard. Once again,
as in the Exile, Rachel weeps for her scattered, enslaved and slaughtered
children. Hers is the voice we hear through all of Advent, if we listen closely
enough. She cries out for all humanity’s children who are made to suffer by
dictates and whims of those who wield power and determine who are in and who are
out of national political, economic and military agendas.
I hear Rachel’s voice in modern tones this Advent from
information from UINICEF. Around 333 million children globally – about 1 in 6 –
live in extreme monetary poverty, defined as surviving on less than US $2.15 a
day.
Children are disproportionately affected: although they
represent about a third of the global population, they account for about half of
those in extreme poverty.
Nearly 900 million children – globally – experience
multidimensional poverty, meaning they lack several of the basic
rights/essentials such as food, health care, safe water, shelter and schooling.
One in four children under age 5 – approximately 181 million –
are living in severe food poverty, meaning they do not access a nutritious,
diverse diet adequate for development.
Child poverty hurts children and our nation’s future. It creates
gaps in cognitive skills for very young children, puts children at greater risk
of hunger and homelessness, jeopardizes their health and ability to learn and
fuels the intergenerational cycle of poverty.
Can you hear the cries of anguish this Advent? There they are,
the cries of poor parents in our own land for their children’s future, a future
made bleak by the cycle of poverty and national neglect and growing
insensitivity to their health and educational needs. They are cries not being
heard by a nation setting priorities that ignore their voices. Let the Advent
preacher hear Rachel’s ongoing cry for her children in our modern world.
God hears Rachel’s cry. When Matthew quotes Jeremiah’s
description of Rachel’s pain, he also implies a voice of hope and comfort to the
grieving. In Jeremiah, God addresses her pain and promises restoration. In the
very next verse God says, "Cease your cries of mourning, wipe the tears from
your eyes. The sorrow you have shown shall have its reward...they shall return
from the enemy’s hand." (Jer. 31:16) Indeed, all of Chapter 33 is about the
total healing God will bring to The People. This restoration will be for all
aspects of their lives; for their interior healing through the forgiveness of
sins and for the restoration of the nation.
Thomas Merton warned that we must not strive to keep an
atmosphere of optimism during Advent by the "mere suppression of tragic
realities." (cf. "Seasons of Celebration") There is, he says, an "anguished
seriousness in Advent." We are anticipating the birth of one Jeremiah says will
be a "just shoot", who will "do what is right and just in the land." Baruch
(5:1), another prophetic voice, tells us this one who is coming will call
Jerusalem to wrap herself "in the cloak of justice from God." Our voices need to
speak against sentimentality this Advent and for justice.
Advent does not pull us out of the world to wrap ourselves in
the warm fuzzies of the season, but to look to the coming of Christ and his
justice. Indeed, he is already among us. How will people know that the One who
is to come has already arrived? It certainly won’t be obvious in the sights and
voices of the malls. The first Sunday of Advent’s Gospel, from Matthew, passage
that opens the season is Jesus’ reminder, "Stay awake! For you do not know on
which day your Lord will come." It is a stark wake up call to sobriety and
circumspection. It not only calls us to examine our own lives, but the signs of
Christ’s presence in our midst. We need to enter more soberly into the Advent
yearning for a new creation, when a new community will come into being. Let the
Advent preacher hear the voice of justice and reordering that wakes us up to be
sober, alert and ready to speak to injustice.
Our spirits are uneasy in Advent, restless and yearning for the
peace promised us in God’s Word. The present world is complex, not easily
dismissed by platitudes and simplistic promises. The world is tense, yearning
for peace, a resolution not easily achieved. We are found waiting in this Advent
world, a world of alienation and division, longing for justice and peace. Let
the Advent preacher hear the longing voices and the incompleteness that
permeates our lives.
It is not that Christ may or may not come – he will come! How
will we receive him? We must receive him ready to set things right in the world.
This Advent is not a mere celebration of the "Christmas season" described to us
in the jingles and the slogans. It is not a nostalgic trip to former, youthful,
more innocent days. Christ’s coming this season is a call to renewal, indeed, a
call to transformation that makes a new world according to the plans voiced for
us by the voices of the ancient prophets we hear through Advent. Let the
preacher hear the voices calling for transformation.
Rachel’s plaint is to be attended to this season. We cannot
deafen our ears to her cry. She wails for the children of exile, fleeing civil
war and violence in their own land. But the season does not end with only that
wail, another woman’s voice is heard, it is that of Elizabeth. She is filled
with the Holy Spirit and cries out in a loud voice to her pregnant kinswoman
Mary, "Blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your
womb,...Blessed is she who trusted that the Lord’s word to her would be
fulfilled." (Lk.1:42-45)
That is the voice that addresses our future. God’s word is
fulfilled and will be fulfilled. Promises made to an inconsolable people have
been kept. The "great day" has come, the "just shoot’ is being planted in the
land and there will be an abundant harvest. All of us cry out with Jerusalem,
"The Lord is our justice." (Jer. 33: 16) Let the Advent preacher hear the final
voices of triumph and preach with certitude that promise of fulfillment.
– Jude Siciliano, OP