| Reading
I: Isaiah 35:1-6a, 10
Although this chapter comes from the earlier part of Isaiah
(Isa 1-39), its theme and mood are far more reminiscent of
the
unknown prophet of the Exile whom we call Second (Deutero-)
Isaiah.
Like Second Isaiah, the writer of this chapter speaks
of the return from Babylonian exile in terms of the exodus:
in the return to Jerusalem the miracles of the first exodus
will be repeated (see Isaiah
40), the wilderness will rejoice
and
blossom as it did in the exodus, and the ransomed of the Lord
will return and come to Zion.
There will also be accompanying
miracles: the eyes of the blind will be opened, the ears of
the deaf will be unstopped, the lame will walk, and the tongues
of the speechless will sing.
This passage is very important for the New Testament. Jesus’ healing miracles,
for instance, are recounted in language derived from this passage. Thus, the
story of the deaf-mute in Mark
7 actually uses the unusual word mogilalos (with “an inpediment in his speech”)
which the Septuagint (Greek Old Testament) uses in this passage.
Again, in the
answer to John in prison (see today’s
gospel), there are further echoes of this
passage.
The New Testament took up such prophecies as Isaiah 35 and found their fulfillment
in the Christ event.
It is in the coming of Christ that the wilderness blossoms as the crocus;
it is in him that the glory of the Lord is revealed (cf. Isaiah 35:2 and 40:5 with John 1:14); it is in Christ that God comes to save his
people; and it is in Christ that the exiles return to Zion with great joy.
There
is nothing unusual in this shift of application. It is a procedure that took
place constantly throughout the Old Testament and Judaism, and it is simply
continued in the New Testament.
Each successive event in salvation history discloses
a new meaning in previous prophecies. In this way the word of the Lord, once
uttered, continues to be an effective force in salvation history. |
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Responsorial
Psalm: 146:6-7, 8-9, 9-10*
This is
the first of the final group of Hallel (Hallelujah) psalms
in the psalter.
It is a psalm of praise for YHWH’s
mighty acts of salvation, and it takes up some of the themes
we have already found
in today’s Old Testament reading.
The Lord opens the eyes
of the blind. “The way of the wicked he brings to ruin” in
the psalm recalls the verse “your God will come with
vengeance” in the reading.
Once again, Christian faith can see the fulfillment of all these blessings in
the coming of Christ. It is he who executes justice for the oppressed, who feeds
the hungry (Mark
6:37-44 and parallels), who upholds the widow (Mark
12:41-44).
And above all, it is in him that the reign of God is established to all generations.
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Reading II: James 5:7-10
Among the readings
appointed for this Sunday, this is the only one that does
not take up the theme of the healing miracles that accompany
the advent of the Messiah. And when it speaks of the “coming”
of the Lord, it means, not his first advent, but the Last
Judgment: “the
Judge is standing at the doors!”
This is not an oversight
on the part of those who drew up the Lectionary. Here we
have a lingering echo of the futurist eschatology that was
dominant on the last Sundays of the old church year and continued
through the first Sunday of Advent.
Even when we concentrate
on the first coming, we must not lose sight of the second.
Even as we rejoice with exuberant joy at the first coming,
we must also listen to the warning of the impending judgment
and to the challenge to be patient.
The use of the farmer
as an example of patience seems to be suggested by our Lord’s
parable of the seed growing secretly in Mark
4:26-29, where
it was applied to the coming of the kingdom.
A second illustration of patience, and of suffering as well, is taken from the
Old Testament prophets. This, too, is especially apt for the Advent season.
The
Old Testament prophets believed that the word they uttered would be fulfilled
very shortly, but they had to learn that God fulfills this word in God’s own good
time, even the word that God had promised through the prophet to fulfill very
soon.
Does God therefore deceive the prophets? Not if Jesus is right in maintaining
that God can rescind God’s holy will as a free act of mercy (see gospel,
first Sunday of Advent). When that happens, the lesson of patience is especially pertinent. |
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Gospel:
Matthew 11:2-11
The casual reader of the Gospels is often puzzled by this story.
How is it that John came to wonder whether Jesus was the Coming One? After all, had not John already greeted Jesus as the Coming
One (Matthew
3:14)? Was he perhaps having second thoughts now?
Had Jesus turned out to be a different kind of Messiah from the one John had expectedone meek and lowly of heart
rather than one who purged the threshing floor with the winnowing fan of judgment?
These are interesting questions, but they are irrelevant to a proper understanding
of our text. The real question is the one addressed to us: Can we believe that he is the Coming One or must we look for another?
In answer to John’s questionwhich is our question, tooJesus does
not give a straight yes or no but points to what is happening in his ministry: the blind see, the lame walk, etc.
Note the oblique way in which Jesus speaks
of his mighty works. He does not say that he is healing the blind. The blind are given their sight by God!
Thus Jesus indirectly affirms that his miracles are works of God wrought through him. But he never says so directly. The hearer
has to work this out for himself or herself and to make a decision of faith.
Traditional apologetics used to cite the miracles of Jesus as “proofs” of
his “divinity.” This is not the way the Bible uses them. They are not
proofs but signssigns for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear.
And they are not signs of Jesus’ divinity (a Greek rather than a biblical term) but signs that God is present and at work in Jesus.
Note that Jesus’ answer echoes
the language of Isaiah 35 and other prophecies (Isaiah 29 and 61).
So the reader is confronted with a decision: Either these works are signs of the eschatological
presence of God in Jesus or they are ultimately trivial episodes with no claim to our faith.
But: “Blessed is anyone who takes no offense [i.e., does not stumble] at me,” that is to say, the person who sees that God is eschatologically
active in Jesus’ word and work is already a partaker in the blessings of the messianic age.
The second part of the gospel reading deals with the place of John the Baptist in salvation history. He is the messenger who prepares the way of the Messiah;
he is the expected Elijah returned to herald the end.
Yet the one who is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he, for John stands at the threshold
of the new age. He is the last of the prophets and, like them, still points forward to the kingdom of heaven and the coming of the Messiah.
He still stands on the Old Testament side of the great divide between the two ages. He is the “sentinel
at the frontier between the aeons” (Bornkamm).
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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. 7-10.
*Webmaster Note: Commentary on the Responsorial Psalm
is from the 1984 Revised Edition, p. 8. |
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Art by Martin Erspamer, O.S.B. (formerly Steve Erspamer, S.M.)
from Religious
Clip Art for the Liturgical Year (A, B, and C).
Used by permission of Liturgy Training Publications. This art may be reproduced only by parishes who purchase the collection
in book or CD-ROM form. For more information go to:
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