How would you feel if you got a Christmas card that
read like this:
Our thoughts of you this
Christmas are best expressed in the words of John the Baptist, “You brood of
vipers!
Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?
Produce good fruit as evidence of your repentance.
Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be thrown into the fire.”
Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?
Produce good fruit as evidence of your repentance.
Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be thrown into the fire.”
Merry Christmas from Fr. Murchadh."
I suppose we would add Fr.
Murchadh, or whoever sent it, to our list of x-friends!
Advent has really become the
time of getting ready for Christmas in the sense of buying the gifts we want to
give, going to office parties, etc, but this is quite different from the
original message. John the Baptist was sent by God to prepare the people for
the coming of Jesus and his message was very strong. ‘Repent, confess your
sins, change your lives and look for happiness in God.’ This is the part of
preparing for Christmas that is easy to overlook. We want the celebration of
Christmas, but we don’t necessarily want to have to repent. Just leave us alone
and let us celebrate. We want absolution, but without having to confess. We
want the love and blessing of God without having to follow the commandments. We
want faith on our terms. That is called ‘cheap grace’. It is empty and it is
not the message of God.
The message of God is a
wonderful one, but is also a very demanding one. We can not come and pick what
we like. Instead we come and ask what is
required of us? That is what the people who came to John asked: ‘What must
we do?’ To be a disciple of Jesus is to be a follower. We are not used to thinking this way, because our world encourages
us to make sure things are as we would
like them. If you’re not happy, move on; but this is not the message of the
Gospels. In the Gospel we listen to what it is that God asks of us. We follow
God on God’s terms and not our terms.
Jesus said that John the
Baptist was the greatest man ever born of woman. He was totally focused on God.
He knew what was important and he passed on the message he was told to pass on
and it cost him his life. He was beheaded by Herod for speaking the truth. We don’t
always want to hear the truth because it is often demanding and challenges us
to change.
If we are serious about
celebrating Christmas as a Christian feast,
then let us not forget the message of John the Baptist. ‘Repent, for the
Kingdom of heaven is close at hand.’ The term ‘repent’ can also mean ‘change
the direction in which you are looking for happiness.’ That is a particularly
powerful message at this time in history. So many people are looking for
happiness in the world, but now so much has collapsed and many have been
bitterly disappointed and left with a feeling that all is gone. However, the
Lord is telling us to turn to him for happiness. It is only in God that we will
find true happiness. The world will disappoint us; God will not. People will
let us down, but God will not.
I stand at the
door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door to me, I will come
in and sit down to eat with him, and he with me. (Rev 3:20)
Those words are from the
book of Revelation, the last book of the Bible and this message is repeated all
through the Bible in different ways. The Lord wants to be at the center of what
we do, but we are the only ones who can allow that to happen.
‘Repent, for
the kingdom of God is close at hand.’
The sin of Adam and Eve was a very similar sin to what we see going on today. It involved three things: (1) rejecting the idea that they had to serve God or listen to his commands; (2) that they could have everything they wanted on their terms, (3) that they were like God themselves. That is very similar to what we see going on in our world right now and it is a real temptation. Why should we have to obey commandments? We don’t like being told we have to obey anyone and yet the word obey literally means ‘to listen intently’ (from the Latin, ‘ob audire’). And if you think about it, it says that Jesus was obedient to the Father. Jesus was equal to the Father, but Jesus was also obedient to him. We are being called to listen intently to what God tells us, to acknowledge that we are God’s creation and that we must obey—listen intently—to what He tells us if we are to find the path to happiness.
The most important preparation we can make for Christmas is the interior preparation, the change of heart, the confession of sins. And yes, most of us don’t like to have to confess our sins, we think we shouldn’t have to, but this is what God asks us to do and if God asks us to do it, it is for our benefit. The celebration of Christmas is meaningless if we skip the kind of preparation that God asks us to make and sadly for many people it has become meaningless. It doesn’t have to be meaningless, because it is the celebration of something very wonderful, the coming of God among us in the person of Jesus.
'I stand at the
door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door to me, I will come
in and sit down to eat with him, and he with me'. (Rev 3:20)
Those words are from the
book of Revelation, the last book of the Bible and this message is repeated all
through the Bible in different ways. The Lord wants to be at the center of what
we do, but we are the only ones who can allow that to happen.
‘Repent, for
the kingdom of God is close at hand.’
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