Second Sunday of Advent: Comfort Food
Thirteen years ago, we were all in a funk. The Christmas season was beginning, the stores were offering all their bargains, but the people of the United States were still in a national shock and not in much of a mood for an oncoming celebration.
Dec 04, 2014
The Second Sunday of Advent (Year B)
Readings: Isaiah 40:1-5, 9-11;
2 Peter 3:8-14
Gospel: Mark 1:1-8
Thirteen years ago, we were all in a funk. The Christmas season was beginning, the stores were offering all their bargains, but the people of the United States were still in a national shock and not in much of a mood for an oncoming celebration. The events of September 11, 2001 were in our minds to such an extent that even the media had to limit its sensationalism. Pictures of the plane crashes and people leaping to their deaths were no longer being aired. We couldn’t handle it. The government was concerned that many people had been too depressed to work. The president addressed the nation, pleading with people to resume their lives or, as the phrase went, “the terrorists will win.” Noted doctors, psychologists, psychiatrists and behaviour specialists told people that it was OK for them to eat food that would relax them even if it was not the best for them. They called it comfort food. Frito-lay and the captains of the cheese doodle industry did banner business. A short while later cardiologists would see a bit of a spike in the number of their patients. I should know, because by the end of the next Spring, I was enjoying their services myself.
Comfort in times of stress cannot be provided by food, even if that food is really, really good tasting. The prophet in the second part of the Book of Isaiah, is told in our first reading to bring comfort to the people. But he is not told to tell them to eat something salty. Instead, he is told to tell them that God is aware of their plight and will deliver them from captivity. You see, the Hebrews had been conquered by the Babylonians in 588 BC. Those who were not murdered were exiled to Babylon. They were literally marched over the desert bound together, some even with hooks through them to keep them from running away. In Babylon, they had no army, no power, no ability to revolt, no hope for escape, at least no hope of their own. Their only hope was that God would see their plight and deliver them from their slavery just as he had delivered their ancestors from slavery in Egypt during the time of Moses. So, the people became far more fervent, far more committed to their faith.
And God heard them. And he promised them a Savior, a Deliverer. They had to prepare for His coming, for He would come with a power and might the world had never experienced. Then Jerusalem, the city that had been destroyed, would not only be rebuilt but would be restored as the center of God’s people. “See, He comes,” the prophet says, “And like a shepherd, he will feed his flock, gather his lambs in his arms, and lead the ewe lambs home with great care.”
Five to six hundred years after this prophecy, John the Baptist appeared with a mandate to give comfort to the people. As in the time of Babylon, a Saviour, a Deliverer would come; only this Deliverer would save the people from the power of sin. As in the time of Isaiah, the people had to prepare for the Saviour. John the Baptist would preach a message of repentance. Sin had to be defeated within each person for evil to be defeated in the world. The people who heard John saw a man, dressed like a prophet clothed in camel hair, eating insects and honey. They listened to his call for them to join him in preparing the Kingdom of God. They listened to His telling them that the Saviour was at hand.
And so we return to those days before the public manifestation of Jesus, when the world was sitting on the edge of its chair, ready to leap with joy at the Coming of the Lord. Comfort was coming then. Comfort is coming now. It is not found in food. Comfort is found in union with the Lord.
And we prepare for Christmas. We prepare not just to celebrate the birth of the Lord 2014 years ago, but to celebrate His coming into each of our lives. And like the prophet Isaiah predicted, like the prophet John the Baptist demanded, we must fill in the valleys of our hearts, the gapes where we exclude the Lord, and level the mountains, the barriers of resistence we construct that block His Way. We must build a highway for Christ into our hearts.
Jesus Christ is a reality, not an ideal. He is coming into our lives, if we let Him. We have to prepare for Him. Christmas is the celebration of love. It is a celebration of the Love that God the Father has for us, to send us His Son. It is the celebration of the love we have for each other, manifested externally in gifts, but only as reflections of the love within each of us. For a gift given out of necessity is not a gift of love, it is just an obligation of a season. God the Father gave us a Gift of Love. We need to return this Gift to Him by giving our deep love to each other. That means that we need to fill in those holes where we allow ourselves to be empty, where we refuse love. For some of us, those holes are canyons. Our refusal to forgive those who have hurt us has created a hole in our hearts that has hampered the coming of the Lord into our lives. We have to level the mountains and hills we have constructed as barriers to love. Our selfishness, our using other people for our happiness, our dependency on externals for happiness, our seeking happiness in hedonism, and in materialism, have all become mountains and hills, barriers to love. We cannot, and must not, allow this to continue. We can fill in the canyons. We can forgive. We can level the mountains. We can remove the barriers to the spiritual.
We can be people ready to receive their King, their Saviour, their Deliverer. We can sing out with our lives, as Rich Mullins had the captives singing:
My Deliverer is coming - my Deliverer
is standing by.
My Deliverer is coming - my Deliverer
is standing by.
He is coming. Jesus really is coming into
each of our lives.
Even better.
He is already there!
And that is our great comfort. --By Fr Joseph A. Pellegrino
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