Homily for the Third Sunday of Advent, Dec. 11, 2022. Isaiah 35:1-6, 10; Gospel of St. Matthew 11:2-11. Theme: Are You Really the One?
For over a thousand years before the birth of Christ, God’s people awaited the arrival of the Messiah. The prophets had foretold that this “One-Who-Is-To-Come” (as the Messiah was sometimes called) would work great signs and wonders to show that God’s Kingdom was breaking into human history. We heard one of these prophecies in our first reading from the Book of Isaiah. And then in the Gospel Jesus quotes that same Old Testament prophecy in response to the questions posed by St. John the Baptist: “Are you really him? Are you really the long-promised Messiah? Or should we look for another?” Our Lord uses Isaiah’s description of the Messiah's mission as a kind of resume to affirm his identity: the blind see, the lame walk, and the dead are restored to life.
Now, I find the question of St. John the Baptist to be both confusing and encouraging at the same time! First let’s look at the aspect of it that can be confusing to me. Why would he ask if Jesus was the Messiah? He had great proof that he was! At the Baptism John saw the Holy Spirit come down upon his cousin Jesus in the form of a dove. In addition, he clearly heard God the Father’s voice identifying Christ as his beloved Son. And we know he recognized Jesus as the Savior because he said about him: “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world!”
But this leads me to the encouraging part. The experience of the saints tell us that a crisis of faith is a normal part of growing in our relationship with Christ. So, why should we exclude St. John the Baptist from going through this common spiritual experience? And the fact that he asked this question of Jesus while he was imprisoned is a very important clue to this possibly being a crisis of faith. I mean, after all, don’t we all tend to question God and double-think his love for us particularly when we are going through struggles, sufferings and difficulties?
At such times we might find ourselves re-examining key things we profess to believe: Is Jesus truly God and risen from the dead? Does God actually hear our prayers and answer them? Is Heaven for real or is it just a pipedream to get us through the fear of death? It’s tempting to ask these questions, particularly at Christmas. Why? Because we spend time singing “Joy to the World” for the Prince of Peace has come, but then we encounter the daily news and hear all the terrible things going on around us. Where is the Kingdom of Peace? Where are the glad tidings of comfort and joy? And so we wonder… has he really come? Is he who he said he was? Or should we look for the way to peace from someone else?
But if we dare to ponder further into this mystery of evil, I think we will see that our doubts are arising because of us, not because Christ is “less than” he said or we believed. We, and not Jesus, are the ones who have failed to be what we said we were: Christians, who are called to love others as Christ has loved us. We are in effect blocking the Prince of Peace from bestowing his reign of harmony upon earth because we refuse to live by the teachings of his Gospel. We are supposed to be the leavens of peace in the world but we allow sin and selfishness to get in the way.
So, before I place blame where it doesn’t belong, I need to ask myself, “What situation or relationship in my life is contributing to the disharmony in the world?” “Where or with whom am I supposed to be a messenger of the Prince of Peace?”
The Nativity of Jesus is an opportunity for us to humble ourselves at his manger in spirit and to recommit to the Christmas message of bringing “peace to people on earth.’
It’s within each of us and within each of our lives that charity and social harmony through spiritual rebirth begins. An old but still popular religious hymn from the 1950’s that says this well, ”Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me..” A corrupt heart will corrupt everything it touches, but a healed heart can begin to heal the environment around it. And so the Prince of Peace begins the work of changing the world by changing each one of us who live in it! This transformation by God’s grace is an important part of what we mean by “salvation”. St. John the Baptist’s core message was, “Repent, prepare the way of the Lord, for the Kingdom of God is near.” Let's follow his directive by asking Jesus to clarify our doubts and to strengthen our faith, so that our lives as Christian instruments of peace will affirm that he is indeed the “One-Who-is-toCome”.







