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I: Isaiah 2:1-5
This is a vision of the pilgrimage of all the nations to
Zion to be taught the ways of YHWH.
YHWH will arbitrate international
disputes, and a universal peace will follow. The prophecy is
reproduced almost verbatim in Micah
4.
It is uncertain whether
Micah lifted it from Isaiah or Isaiah from Micah, or whether
both derived it from a common source. Scholars seem to favor
the third possibility. It certainly looks like an ancient liturgical
fragment.
It is important to notice two things about this vision. It is speaking about
what will happen at the end of historyin other words, it is eschatological.
It is not envisaged as a possibility within history. Holy Scripture does not
permit us to indulge in the illusion that a time will come within history when
there will be no more wars.
This does not, of course, mean that we should not
work to eliminate the causes of war or to avert or bring to an end particular
wars. It only means that we should not cherish extravagant hopes that are doomed
to inevitable disappointment. The final abolition of war will be possible only
when God’s purpose has triumphed in the consummation of history.
The second point to notice about the vision is that it is only when the nations
have been taught God’s ways and walk in God’s paths that they will beat their swords
into plowshares and live at peace with one another. “It is a beautiful vision;
but, be it noted, peace rests in no human program, but in obedience to the divine
law” (J. Bright in Peake’s Commentary on the Bible). |
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Responsorial
Psalm: 122: 1-2, 3-4, 4-5, 6-7, 8-9*
The responsorial
psalm takes up certain points from the first readingthe
pilgrimage to Zion and the ensuing peace. This psalm was
sung by the pilgrims as they went up to Jerusalem for the
festivals. The first part expresses the pilgrims’ excitement
as they arrive within the sacred precincts. They exult in
the unity that Jerusalem symbolizes as the festal crowds,
representing all the tribes, flow together to the temple
of YHWH.
In some strands of postexilic Judaism, it became part of the eschatological hope
to envisage a day when the nations would flow together to Jerusalem (e.g., Isaiah
25:6). The New Testament sees this hope partially fulfilled in the admission
of the Gentiles into the Church, and completely realized in the final coming
of Christ.
See especially Romans
9-11, where the Apostle Paul develops the thought
that in bringing the collection from the Gentile churches to Jerusalem, he is
symbolizing the partial fulfillment of this hope, and propounds the conviction
that his mission will contribute decisively to the final fulfillment, when the
fullness of the Gentiles will be gathered in and all Israel will be saved (Romans
11:25-26).
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Reading II: Romans 13:11-14
This is the traditional
reading for the first Sunday of Advent. It is full of great
New Testament eschatological words: night/day, darkness/light,
sleep/wake, hour and full time.
This language
presupposes the early Christian scheme of the two agesthis
present evil age and the new age soon to dawn. It interprets
Christian existence as a life of tension.
It is lived within
this present old age but is already determined by the new
age that is soon to come. Christians stand in the dark with
their faces lit by the coming dawn.
They can therefore already
cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light.
They can live “as in the day,” although actually
they are still in the night.
Note that it is not by their own unaided effort that the believers are to conduct
themselves becomingly as in the day, but rather by “putting on the Lord
Jesus.”
In Galations 3:27 the same phrase is associated with baptism: “As
many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.”
Hence,
in our present passage Paul is exhorting Christians to live out the implications
of their baptism, in the power that their baptismal status gives.
One final problem. Paul tells his readers that our “salvation” is nearer
than when we first believed, that is, nearer than it was when we first became
Christians.
By “salvation” Paul is not thinking of salvation in an
individualistic, pietistic sense, as though we were now nearer to our death and
therefore to heaven. He means the great day of salvation, the consummation at
the end of history.
Like all the early Christians, the Apostle believed that
this end was to come very shortlyso soon, in fact, that it was now appreciably
nearer than when the Romans first became Christians. Paul was clearly mistaken
as to the date, for we are still here today and the consummation has not come
yet.
Perhaps an answer can be sought along these lines: the Christian always
has to live as though the final consummation were just around the corner, in
the certainty of it, a certainty so strong that already the light of the new
age is casting its ray upon the Christian’s present existence. |
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Gospel:
Matthew 24:37-44
This passage is from Matthew’s version of the so-called Synoptic
apocalypse (Matthew 24; Mark 13; Luke 21). Like other contemporary
Jewish apocalypses, the Synoptic apocalypse relates a series
of catastrophes identifiable with historical events that preceded
the Jewish revolt of 66-70 C.E.
These
events are to usher in
the final consummationthe return of the Son of Man, the
Last Judgment, and the new heaven and the new earth.
Such an apocalyptic scheme creates an overall impression that conflicts with
the general tenor of Jesus’ teaching elsewhere, including this present passage,
which Matthew has inserted from his sayings source into the Synoptic apocalypse.
Here,
in sayings that have the freshness of authentic Jesus material, the end is depicted,
not as something that is preceded by a carefully planned apocalyptic
timetable, but as something that is to come suddenly, like the flood in Noah’s
day: “they knew nothing until the flood came . . . . Keep awake therefore, for
you do not know on what day your Lord is coming . . . . for the Son of Man is
coming at an unexpected hour.”
This coming of the Son of Man will be accompanied by the ultimate separation
of the saved and the lost. Two men will be in the field; one will be taken and
the other left. Two women will be grinding at the mill; one will be taken and
the other left. One will be saved, the other rejected. Therefore, watch as a
householder must watch for the thief.
There can be no doubt that sayings like
this, rather than the Synoptic apocalypse as a whole, correctly reproduce the
eschatological message of Jesus.
But this brings us face to face with the same problem as in the Pauline passage,
though here it is Jesus rather than the early church that was apparently mistaken
about the date of the end. It did not come soon.
Once again, we can take the
apocalyptic perspective as an expression of the eternal consequences of the choice
with which Jesus confronts his hearers. They must certainly react as though the
end were just around the corner.
Joachim Jeremias has made a further bold and
exciting suggestion: Jesus does not regard the will of God as fixed and immutable.
God can shorten the days for the sake of the elect (Mark
13:20), and he can
also lengthen the period of grace (Luke
13:6-9) as a free act of mercy.
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Reginald H. Fuller |
Copyright © 1984, 2006
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota.
All
rights reserved. Used by permission from Liturgical
Press, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
|
Preaching the Lectionary:
The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller and Daniel Westberg. Liturgical Press. 2006 (Third Edition), pp. 1-4
*Webmaster Note: Commentary on the Responsorial Psalm
is from the 1984 Revised Edition, p. 2. |
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