Gospel Reflection 2020/2021

3rd Sunday of Advent

13 Dec 2020

[ John 1: 6-8, 19-28 ]

The Third Sunday of Advent is also called Gaudete Sunday. Gaudete means rejoice! We rejoice because we are already halfway through our waiting – the Lord is at hand!

“What does ‘the Lord is at hand’ mean? In what sense this ‘closeness’ of God?”

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI tells us that, “God’s ‘closeness’ is not a question of space and time but rather of love: love brings people together! This coming of Christmas reminds us of this fundamental truth of our faith, and in front of the manger we shall be able to savour Christian joy contemplating in the newborn Jesus the Face of God who made Himself close to us out of love.”

It is not co-incidence that in the Gospel Reading this Sunday, we are also told of the mystery of this ‘closeness’ of God, “There stands among you – unknown to you – the One who is coming after me.”

And this has three significance:

1) I am not He.

In life, we want control over everyone and everything. In truth, no one and nothing is within our control. The politikus and the COVID-19 pandemic in Malaysia have demonstrated how helpless and hopeless we are. We pray and do our best, but our efforts seem futile and what we have accomplished is insignificant. We voted for a better Malaysia, but the whole nation is now crumbling and rotting away at an alarming speed. We have been observing the COVID-19 SOP since March 2020, but the end of the pandemic is nowhere near. Nevertheless, St John the Baptist is inviting us to accept the truth that we are finite and only God is infinite – we need to let God be God and to trust that God is always in control.

2) He comes after me.

However, we must be careful not to fall into passivism. No doubt, I am not He – I am not God; I am not the Christ. It does not mean we leave everything to God. There is a saying attributed to St Ignatius of Loyola that we should pray 'as if everything depends on God, work as if everything depends on us'. We need to do what is possible, prayerfully; and God will take care of the impossible, definitely. We need to work hard but leave the outcome to God. If we sincerely believe that God is in charge, then we can tolerate mixed results and endure failure. And to echo this is Archbishop Oscar Romero, “…We are workers, not master builders; ministers, not messiahs. We are prophets of a future that is not our own.”

3) Make a straight way for the Lord.

How can we make a straight way for the Lord if we do not know His way? Without God, human loses his purpose. Without Christ, Christian loses his mission. To know the way of the Lord, we must be His true disciples and be part of His Living Body, the Church. We must learn to make the mind of Jesus Christ our own, strive to pattern our lives on the teachings of the Gospel, and to love the Lord our God and our neighbour. This was Christ’s command and He was its perfect example. [cf. RCIA 52] Christ’s mind must be our mind, Christ mission must be our mission: like Christ, we must “bring good news to the poor, bind up hearts that are broken; proclaim liberty to the captives, freedom to those in prison; and proclaim a year of favour from the Lord” [Is 61: 1-2].

This Advent, Pope Francis reminds us that 'no pandemic can turn off the light of Christmas’. Yes, the light of Christ shining forth from Christmas will never be turned off or dimmed! We need to prepare to recognise and receive He who is coming towards us at the speed of light. This speed means that He who is coming towards us is here already. [Fr Laurence Freeman]

Let our fervent prayer be:

“Dear Jesus, cleanse us of our sins and prepare us for Your coming.”