Our reading
from Isaiah this morning (Is 25:6-10) brings to mind the opening of the movie,
Oliver. “Food, glorious food, hot
sausage and mustard…” Juicy, rich food,
indeed!
Throughout
the Bible, food is seen as a sign of God’s providential love. Through Isaiah, God images heaven itself as a
great and bountiful feast of juicy, rich food and choice, fine wine. Jesus uses this similar imagery in several of
his parables.
The
miraculous feeding with a few fish and loaves that we also just heard (Mt
15:32-37) is the only miracle – other than the resurrection of Jesus – that
appears in all four gospels. In fact, it
appears six times, for both Matthew and Mark relate two occasions of this
miracle.
In
the parable of the sheep and the goats, the first of the works of mercy which
the Son of Man considers a marker of those who were to be admitted to the
kingdom was, “when I was hungry, you gave me food.”
In an
economy of subsistence agriculture, desperate, life-threatening hunger is just
one bad harvest away. Virtually everyone
in Jesus’ day would have known times of extreme hunger.
Thus, the presence of food was an occasion to give great thanks and
praise to God.
For
me…not so much. Like the air that I
breathe, food is just there. I’ve always
known that the next meal is only hours away; snacks are even closer! In a very real sense, I take food for
granted. And this is my great loss.
For whenever
I take anything for granted, I begin to think that it is my right to have
it. I deserve it. I’ve earned it by my hard work or my
goodness. Ultimately, this becomes true
of everything that comes my way. I
deserve the good food, the big house, the fancy car, the warm clothes, and all
the comforts of life. And if I feel that
I deserve everything I have, why should I be grateful? Who would I need to thank?
When
I am completely lost in this world of ingratitude, I find that I even take my
life for granted. I wake up in the
morning and immediately start thinking of all the things I must do, the people
I must see, and the places I must go.
I’ve taken for granted, of course, that the day would be there, and that
I would wake up to live this day and be able to work on my oh-most-important tasks. I have taken my life for granted.
My
ungrateful world, while seeming at most times to be a most warm and pleasurable place,
is actually cold and discomforting, for at its center is a stony heart, shut
off from the love of God.
When
someone threatens what I take for granted as my just desserts, I become
indignant and angry. I strike out at those
who threaten me or take what is mine.
And yet I am never satisfied with what is mine, for I see others who
have even more. Why is this more not
also my rightful due? I become grasping
and greedy as I crave to have the things that others have, the things that I
don’t have, yet must have.
Advent
is a season to reawaken my heart to God’s great love, to break the chains of
ingratitude which bind my heart in selfishness and greed.
Advent
prepares us to celebrate the greatest gift we could possibly receive, a greater
gift than life itself. In a few short
weeks, we will celebrate the gift of salvation, of God-become-man, God sharing
our humanity that we may share God’s divinity.
We could not have done this by ourselves, and we did not do anything to
deserve this wonder, for this gift was tendered “while we were still
sinners.” It is a gift of unimaginable,
unlimited, unconditional love.
Opened
up to gratitude, we become even more aware of this great love God has for us. A virtuous cycle ensues.
Aware
of God’s great love, we begin to see our very life as a gift from God, an
occasion for thanks and praise. We begin
to see our possessions as precious not because they are our right, or because
they make our life more pleasant or easy, but precious because they are gifts
from our all-loving God, the source of all happiness, the source of all joy.
As
see our lives and our possessions as precious gifts, gifts which God continues
to provide to us each and every day – the day itself being God’s gift – we
become generous in sharing these gifts with others, serving Christ who comes to
us each day in the guise of one of his children in need.
In
sharing God’s love today, we prepare ourselves to receive the culmination of
God’s gift, the promised final coming of Jesus, bringing the fullness of God’s
kingdom to earth.
This
time of year, we wish people a merry Christmas and a happy New Year. We don’t seem to have a similarly apt
adjective for Advent. Here is my
thought:
Have
a most grateful Advent.
Deacon Norm, A very good thought! You are a very good homilist. I hope you get to preach once in a awhile.
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