There’s always
hope
On Friday morning of this past
week, students from Corpus Christi school came to the church to join us for the
celebration of the regular morning Mass.
I’m told that they have been here many times before, but this was the
first time that they had been here during this school year, so I wasn’t quite
sure what to expect. Children are truly
a gift to us adults, you know, if we have the courage to learn from their
wisdom. During the homily on Friday, I explained
to the children that God gives special gifts all through the year but especially
at Christmas and during the Advent season.
I then proceeded to ask them if they knew what these special gifts
were. I fully expected to hear about
toys or about the Halo games the boys want.
Imagine my surprise when not one of the gifts they mentioned was
tangible, much less visible. No, this
group of young children quickly named such gifts as hope, joy, peace,
togetherness with family and loved ones and even forgiveness. I suppose you might say that such responses
reassured my heart, and made me believe that there is hope for this
up-and-coming generation.
Hope is at the heart of the
readings we’ve heard this weekend. Anyone who has travelled to the Holy Land
will tell you that it’s a pretty harsh and unforgiving terrain. At first, it appears to be a desert, and
indeed it’s not far from it. Here at
home, we are spoiled with such luxuries as grass (at least during the summer
months), but in the Holy Land, vegetation is precious, as is rain. Even though you’re not far from the sea, the
landscape is far from verdant. Trees grow there only because they have been so
carefully cultivated and cared for. The
majority of the population has been no stranger to suffering at the hands of
all those who sought throughout history to control this gateway to the Orient,
not least of which were the mighty Romans.
Speaking not to the mighty but
to the powerless, the prophet Baruch dared to call his hearers to believe in
themselves: to understand that they could hope for a better future. Arise,
O Jerusalem, he says, for every high
mountain and the everlasting hills will be made low. With words which evoke images of the
impossible coming to pass, the prophets have challenged their audiences throughout
the centuries to believe that the true secret to inner strength can often be
found in the things and situations which appear at first to be most fragile.
Primary among these images is
the Nativity, something we will have a chance to examine more closely in a few
weeks’ time, but the theme of hope coming out of hopeless situations, and
strength being found in the midst of weakness can be found even in the image of
the Baptist who happens on the scene in today’s gospel. When I think of John the Baptist, I somehow
have a vision of a man standing in the midst of a stream: the River
Jordan. He’s calling out in a voice that
sounds half convinced, and half crazed, belligerent and challenging while at
the same time daring those who venture close enough to listen to hope that what
he says might actually be true. Yet, the
scriptures describe him as a voice crying
out in the wilderness (the perfect image of the weak, feeble, perhaps even
ignored sprout of which we spoke last week).
If John’s voice could so
easily be ignored by the wise and powerful of his day, is it any wonder that we
can so easily ignore the wisdom of the voices that speak to us today? Perhaps if we were truly to listen with the
ear of faith, we might hear a child’s voice, so innocent, so easily ignored in
an adult world, speaking words of hope for today’s generation, calling us to
seek joy and peace and to truly believe that these are possible. Here then is the challenge for the coming
week: listen for the voices of those who
encourage us to hope, even when hope seems furthest from the realm of
possibility, and take the time to thank God for the gift of children and others
who announce this good news to us. Pray for them with joy because in their
own way, they announce the gospel to our world, and the one who began this good work among them will surely bring it to
completion.
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