AD SENSE

2nd Week of Advent, Thursday, Dec 14: St John of the Cross

2nd Week of Advent, Thursday, Dec 14

Isaiah 41:13-20 / Matthew 11:11-15

I am the Lord your God; I will turn deserts into marshes.

Before child labour laws were enacted, a ten-year-old boy was working in a factory in Naples, Italy. He wanted to earn money for music lessons. After singing for a schoolteacher, however, he was told to save his time and money. "Forget about singing," the teacher said; "you have no talent." The boy's mother, a poor peasant woman, encouraged her son in the face of the rebuff. She even went barefooted to help save money for his lessons. 

Her efforts paid off, and her son, Enrico Caruso, became one of the world's greatest tenors. Faith and perseverance are gifts through which God helps us turn "deserts into marshes."

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How supportive are we of other people, especially young people? "The stone which the builders rejected as worthless turned out to be the most important of all." Psalm 118:22

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It is heartening to hear these days a strong and repeated message of encouragement. This is what we believe in if we trust in the nearness of God in his Son Jesus Christ. When people are poor and afflicted, God is near as their Savior, that is, one who is bound to them with close bonds and who is bound to come to their assistance. The poor are those who trust in him. He promises them a new paradise. Even the least in his kingdom are greater than the greatest and last of the prophets, John the Baptist. 

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Life can be very much easier and comfortable when we have someone around to help us and guide us. One good example is when we have to go to a foreign place for a meeting or for business. It would be very much easier and enjoyable if we have someone to receive us at the airport and show us the way. Then we would be able to enjoy the sights and the scenery without having the anxiety and the fear of the unknown.

In this season of Advent, there is someone who is ever willing to help us in our Advent journey towards Christmas. John the Baptist is our Advent guide and he shows us the way and the preparations that we need to do. His message is clear and simple - repentance and the conversion of heart. We must remember that it is God who sent John the Baptist to be our Advent guide as we journey in faith towards Jesus. 

Even Jesus, in the gospel, would exalt John the Baptist and affirm that John was the one sent by God to turn the hearts of the people back to God. So, in our prayer, let us also ask John the Baptist to pray for us so that we can journey deeper into the heart of Jesus and in turn lead others to experience Jesus at Christmas.

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Jesus tells us that, until the coming of John the Baptist, the kingdom of Heaven was subjected to violence, and the violent were taking it by storm. The ground reality of the people of Israel was mostly a story of defaulting in their faithfulness to the God who had moulded them as his chosen people. Through them, he planned to establish His Kingdom and draw all peoples to himself. But because of their unfaithfulness, they were violently ripped apart and had to undergo oppression and subjection under the superpowers of their day. John the Baptist, whom Jesus affirmed as Elijah who was to return, is the last of the Old Testament prophets who came to usher in the Messiah. Am I ready to welcome the Lord when he comes again?

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Opening Prayer

Lord our God, you do not abandon those who rely on you. Take us by the hand when we are afraid, help us when we call out to you, for we experience that we are powerless to establish your kingdom of justice and love. Send your Son again among us today to be our Lord and S
aviour now and forever. Amen

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Saint John of the Cross (c. 1542-1591)

Feast Day December 14

John of the Cross was locked in a cell six feet wide and ten feet long for nine months, with no light except that which filtered through a slit high up in the wall. He later forgave the men who had imprisoned him. How could he do that? He explained, “Where there is no love, put love, and you will find love.”

John’s father had been disowned by his wealthy Spanish family when he married a poor weaver rather than a woman of equal economic status. Living in poverty proved to be too much for him, and he died shortly after John was born. John spent much of his youth in an orphanage, where he was clothed, fed, and given an elementary education. At the age of 17, he found a job in a hospital and was accepted into a Jesuit college. In 1563 he entered the Carmelite Order. Eventually he enrolled in another university, where he did so well that he was asked to teach a class and to help settle disputes.

When he met Teresa of Ávila and learned from her about the reform of the Carmelite Order, John decided to help with it. As part of this decision, he wore sandals instead of shoes and lived very simply in prayer and solitude. In 1577 the attitude toward the reform shifted.

John was caught up in a misunderstanding and imprisoned at Toledo, Spain. During those months of darkness in that little cell, John could have become bitter, revengeful, or filled with despair. But instead, he kept himself open to God’s action, for no prison could separate him from God’s all-embracing love. During this time he had many beautiful experiences and encounters with God in prayer. Later he would describe these experiences in poetry. In 1578 John escaped to southern Spain to join the reformed Carmelites. There he held leadership positions and wrote reflections on his experiences, which showed his deep spirit of prayer. When he became ill, he chose to go to the city of Ubeda, where no one knew him. It was there that he died.