My friends, here we are at the second Sunday of Advent, and we know that means that the fourth Sunday will be upon us sooner than we think—and even quicker as that same fourth Sunday will be shared with Christmas Eve this year. Last week I suggested to all of us that we can “wait expectantly,” which is what Advent is really all about, and make cookies at the same time, or whatever other preparations you may be about this time of year!
Advent reminds us friends, through the Scripture readings that it is good, “to set something aside” for a time, “waiting expectantly” for that special event to happen. The Scriptures given for this Sunday remind us of this on several levels. Mark repeats Isaiah’s message as he begins his gospel with another prophet, John the Baptist— “Make a straight path—prepare a way.” One dimensionally, we can see this command as putting our physical house in order because we are getting ready to host guests at Christmastime. And while we may feel that this is an important part of our preparations, we know that our brother Jesus, and our Loving God, expects us to go deeper.
Most of us, at least we women would not think of inviting guests to our homes without preparing the physical space to house them, or planning for guests without preparing enough food, even special foods for the time they will be with us.
Our God, through the prophets is asking for no less—in order that we will be ready to hear the radical message of love that Jesus gives to our world, we will need to prepare our hearts “to hear,” to accept, and ultimately share that message with our world. And we know that this sharing will not always be easy.
Isaiah’s words to us today say as much: “…every hill and mountain be laid low.” To me these words say that we will need some change in our lives to see and to hear Jesus’s message that is, as we said last week, often counter-cultural.
That brings us once again to mentioning the ritual color that the Second Vatican Council suggested churches use, going forward, to signify the work and the preparation of the Advent Season—blue. This color should suggest to us that we are preparing for a “new creation”—Emmanuel—who will bring us new life. This season is all focusing on Jesus and the “new life” he can bring us if we are open to it.
As we spoke of last week, this is not a season to “beat our breasts” asking for forgiveness as during the Season of Lent, symbolized by the ritual color of purple. Advent again, is a time for us to “expectantly wait” and to prepare, and to remember a life coming into our midst, capable of changing in many ways how we live our lives and for whom we live them. Maybe that is why our present-day Church fathers have, in my mind, wrongly chosen to concentrate on our need for forgiveness, through the ritual color of purple, instead of “new life and creation” in the footsteps of Jesus of Nazareth. People who feel “worthless and sinful” are easier, I would guess, to control than those empowered by the words of Jesus to extend justice toward all—to give them new life represented by the ritual color, blue.
And we would be remiss if we did not mention the wonderful place that our sister-mother-friend, Mary of Nazareth plays in Advent-Christmastime. The ritual color blue stands to represent her as well and the creative and wonderful life she gave our world.
I did find in my search for the reason why our Church went back to the purple, instead of the blue for Advent, an obscure liturgist who suggested that if we used blue for this Season, it would suggest that Advent is “all about Mary.” Now, while it is true that the Season is not all about Mary, I believe we would all agree that she did play a most significant role! But far be it from any hierarchical church man to give a woman, or women in general, any credit for their gifts to our world!
We did not meet for the annual feast of the Immaculate Conception this past Friday as is our custom for all the holydays simply because preparing for more than one liturgy in a week is more than your pastor can handle, for the most part. But with this one, there is a double reason, in that it really doesn’t uplift the “Mary” in justice that we should be emulating. That is why we are singing The Canticle of the Turning today—a real marching song coming from a woman’s heart about the Son she is giving the world—not a submissive, “kept-in-her-place” female, but a strong, decisive woman speaking about justice for all, the justice her Son will bring. And when I think about her in that way, I realize why hierarchical Church men wouldn’t want to uplift such a woman.
So friends, let us continue our journey toward Christmas, remembering that our brother Jesus came first and foremost for the lowly, signified by his birth in a stable, to tell us that we are, each one of us, truly loved by our God, no exceptions! Amen? Amen!