Like so many at this time of year, I have recently found my waking hours increasingly compressed with more meetings, visits and obligations and all the while, the holidays draw near. It seems that our pace quickens, but do we know where we are going? This seasonal busyness so often causes us to lose focus on our destination. As such, the trappings of the season can potentially eclipse what we as Catholics believe to be the very purpose of Advent.
How heartening, then, that with characteristic candor and timeliness, our recent liturgical readings have reminded us of that ultimate horizon toward which we journey: the very purpose of our lives.
Jesus tells us in the Gospel reading for the approaching first Sunday of Advent, "Be watchful! Be alert! You do not know when the time will come. It is like a man traveling abroad" (Mk 13:34). Indeed, our readings of late if we have listened carefully have been a wake-up call to stir us from whatever it is that might be causing or tempting us to lose focus.
"May He not come suddenly and find you sleeping Watch!" (Mk 13:36-37).
Ever watchful, ever vigilant, our Church sets before us in Advent a time to wake up, focus, and mature as disciples. Will we take this opportunity at the close of the "Year of the Eucharist" and at the outset of a new liturgical year to find our Lord and Savior anew? If so, how?
Allow me to offer three of many possible suggestions.
Our destination in Advent is the welcoming of Jesus Christ ever more into our lives. The road leading there is especially in our consumerist society congested, lined with malls, full schedules and myriad distractions. Let us with singleness of heart focus on our destination in the coming weeks. If we do, then the surpassing beauty of God soon to be made evident in the coming of His Son will so capture our attention that this Christmas will find us faithful, focused and ready.
Give Thanks
Welcome Him in the Sacrament of Reconciliation
Find Him in the Eucharist
Absolutely to all three!
Here's hoping all of us can combine the busyness of the season with time for rest and reflection.