A Beacon of Light… Preparing For The Greatest Gift

By FR. RICHARD D. BRETON JR.

(Editor’s Note: Fr. Richard D. Breton Jr. is a priest of the Diocese of Norwich, Conn.)

Abide With Us

It is so true that evil abounds in our world. We know of our concentration camps, oppressive political regimes, dictators, brutality, sexual predators, religious fanatics, and other agents of the Evil One. Totalitarianism in the forms of Nazism, Communism, unrestrained acquisition of money and power, and religious persecution have beset us in recent centuries.

They all have parentage found in earlier human history. All of these evils crucified Christ; all of these evils continue to crucify Him as He lives now within us in His Mystical Body. Nailing others continues to nail Christ to His cross.

What John the Baptist calls us to see is that religious persecution and systemic evils, as symbolized in the Pharisees and Sadducees, will beset us as long as we fail to recognize Christ our Savior living now among us. We need to recognize that Jesus Christ didn’t come among us 2,000 years ago and then leave. Not at all! In fact, God would not play that dirty trick on us. We need to see that God sent His Son among us to abide with us, not only among us but live within us. With Him we can overcome what original sin has done to us.

The path out of the mess of our lives is the path of personal repentance and conversion, a conversion in which we change our ways. These prepare the way for us to receive Christ, God’s gift to us. Repentance isn’t simply saying: “I’m sorry” and then moving on as if nothing has changed. Repentance involves recognition, becoming aware of our sins, something quite beyond simply feeling bad about what we have done. Nice sentiments are not the stuff of repentance. To be sure, God offers us His forgiveness, but nothing happens until we respond. But respond with changed patterns of behavior? That is true repentance.

You have all heard of the Twelve Steps set forward in the recovery program offered by Alcoholics Anonymous. Permit me here to substitute the word “sin” for the word “alcohol” found in just the first three of those twelve steps.

First: We admitted we were powerless over sin — that our lives had become unmanageable.

Second: Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.

Third: Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.

Recovery is hard work, you can’t just talk the talk, you’ve got to walk the walk. That is what John the Baptist is telling us. The wonderful thing about Advent is that at the end we are given the certitude of God’s loving presence in our lives, God’s Holy Spirit abiding deep within our hearts and souls. Advent is all about expectant faith and hope found in the Gift of God, who loved us so much, that He sent us His very best….His only-begotten Son.

And if we receive Him in our hearts and souls, receive Him not simply with good wishes and nice thoughts, then the changes that we enter into will take us out of our weakness and into the certainty of God’s love abiding deep within us, empowering us to deal with our wounded selves and enjoy life as He would have us enjoy it.

He is our Savior; we are powerless to be our own savior. Advent affords us the opportunity to wait with expectant faith, to experience the love of God, made present in the world through the birth of our Savior.

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