YEAR B: HOMILY FOR THE 2ND SUNDAY OF ADVENT (3)

YEAR B: HOMILY FOR THE 2ND SUNDAY OF ADVENT

HOMILY THEME: BAPTISM OF THE LORD…. “John began to baptize in the desert; he preached a baptism of repentance.”

BY: Fr. Faust BAILO

 

HOMILY: Today, as the curtain of the divine drama rises, we can already hear someone shouting: «Prepare the way of the Lord, level his paths» (Mk 1,3). Today we meet John the Baptist as he sets the stage for Jesus’ coming.

Some people thought John himself was the Messiah. He spoke like the prophets of old, saying that man must turn from sin to avoid punishment and turn to God to experience his mercy. But this is a message for all times and places and John spoke it with particular urgency. So a stream of people, from Jerusalem and from all over Judea, flowed into the wilderness of John to hear him preach.

Why did John attract so many men and women? Sure, he blasted Herod and the religious leaders, a daring act that fascinated the common people. But he had strong words for them as well: they too were sinners and needed to repent. And when they confessed their sins, he baptized them in the Jordan River. Hence, John the Baptist captivated them because they understood the message of true repentance he was trying to convey. A repentance that was more than just confession of sin —in itself a long step forward and a beautiful one indeed! But repentance based on the belief that only God can both forgive and erase, both settle the debt and clear away the debris of my soul, straighten up my crooked moral ways.

«Do not waste this time of mercy offered by God», Saint Gregory the Great says. Do not waste this time of embracing the purifying love offered to us, we can say to ourselves as the time of Advent unfolds before us.

Are we ready to straighten the paths for our Lord this Advent? Could I make this the time for a truer, more searching confession in my life? John called for sincerity —sincerity with oneself— and abandonment to God’s mercy. In doing so he helped people to live for God, to understand that living is a matter of fighting to open up the paths of virtue and letting God’s grace vivify their soul with his joy.

Fr. Faust BAILO
(Toronto, Canada)

Discover more from Catholic For Life

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading