Wednesday, December 29, 2010

2nd Sunday of Christmas - Year A (John 1:10-18)

This Sunday’s text focuses on recognition and, more importantly, lack of recognition.  John’s gospel is, in many ways, all about spiritual blindness.  Human beings, apart from grace, are unable to see things as they really are.  This blindness leads to frequent incidents of misunderstanding and misidentification.  Faith brings grace and grace brings sight.  Once we can see, we are able to see Jesus Christ for who he truly is, the Word by whom all things were created become flesh.  Through that incarnate Word, we are able to see God.  Whatever we want to know about God we can know in and through our knowledge of Jesus Christ.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

1st Sunday of Christmas - Year A (Matthew 2:13-23)

Joseph, like the patriarch for whom he was named, appears to have been a dreamer.  Our contemporary culture doesn’t put much stock in dreams and even less in dreams as a direct communication from God.  Acting on information received in a dream is simply unreasonable.  And yet, as the philosopher Blaise Pascal once said, “love has reasons which reason cannot understand”.   Lovers do believe in dreams.  Couples dream of a future together.  Parents dream futures for their children.  God, it seems, has dreams for us – divine dreams united with our human dreams.  The prophet Joel promised that the old would dream dreams and young see visions.   God’s promise is revealed to us in the totality of our human experience, not simply through our intellect.  Joseph’s openness to God’s dream for the world allowed him to move beyond righteousness to grace and to thwart the powers of this world set on foiling God’s redemptive plan. 

Being a "good" dreamer ironically requires a perpetual kind of wakefulness.  In other words, we have to pay attention.  We pray for eyes to see, ears to hear and hearts filled with desire.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

4th Sunday of Advent - Year A (Matthew 1:18-25)

Except for the wise men which popular imagination tacks on to the end of the Lucan nativity account and the quote from the Septuagint version of Isaiah, Matthew’s telling of the story plays very little role in our Christmas traditions. It seems to me however that what might be called the “Annunciation to Joseph” has some important lessons to teach us. First among those is the fact that although Joseph is “righteous”, that righteousness based on the Law is insufficient for the task at hand. The angel (the evangelist) announces the Gospel to Joseph who then, by grace, is lead to take Mary and her child into his home. Joseph acts on faith in the promise of God.
Secondly, it is important to note that despite our later romanticizing of the event, Joseph’s relationship to both Mary and Jesus falls well outside what we have come to call the traditional family. The presence in our world of “God with us” reorders human relationships in new and surprising ways; even creating a family where there was none. As Christians, all of our relationships are contingent upon our relationship with Jesus. New family structures are evaluated in light of that relationship with Christ and not the demands of the law which did not allow for the formation of what we have come to call the “holy family”.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

3rd Sunday of Advent – Year A (Matthew 11:2-11)

The Baptizer’s disciples ask Jesus if he is the one who is to come. Jesus replies that the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them. I am not blind, lame, a leper, deaf, dead or poor. Of course it is possible to spiritualize this list to make it applicable to everyone, but I think Jesus’ intentions were quite literal. So what, then, does the advent of the Christ have to do with me or, depending on your circumstances, you? For those of us outside these categories, Jesus asks only that we do not take offence at his preference for the outcast. It is to the homeless shelter, the AIDs clinic, the mental hospital and the welfare office that Christ comes. His advent is first of all for them and it is from the abundance of blessing and healing for them that we too find the free gift of grace. Blessed are those who do not take offence.