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GOSPEL, FIRST READING & PSALM TRANSCRIPT (Subscribe or Login for Full Transcript):
One of the things — you’ve probably had this experience — if you’ve ever read the lives of the Saints is the astounding spiri- tual strength of the Saints. Not just of their ability to fast, or to pray for hours on end, to establish monasteries and convents, to travel to the ends of the earth to make disciples of Jesus like the missionary orders, but their spiritual strength in the power of their holiness. The power of their ability to convert souls to Christ, to draw people to Jesus, flows out of the fact that they’ve been engaged in spiritual exercises, right. There not just lounging about; they’re not just laying about. They’re trying to grow every single day in holiness, in prayer, in fasting, in reading the word of God, in teaching and preaching. And so I don’t know about you, but whenever I read the lives of the Saints I feel like a spiritual wimp, right. Maybe you’ve had this experience: you buy one of these exercise videos and you start to watch these people who have been training and exercising every day and then you try to do what they do and you can’t. Why? Well because you’re not strong enough. The same thing is true in the life of holiness, right. We have to perform spiritual exercises if we want to be strong, if we want to grow in strength. We can’t just assume that because we’re baptized we’re going to be strong. No, baptism makes us a child of God but it doesn't make us an adult; it doesn't bring us into spiritual adulthood. In order to be an adult we have to learn, we have to grow, but we also have to exercise. We have to exercise our spiritual faculties.
So, I think this is fascinating and real important that at the very beginning of the liturgical year the church places before us the exhortation to grow in strength. To pray, to keep vigil, and to prepare ourselves for the coming of Jesus through spiri- tual exercises. And that should set a tone for our Advent season that may be some- what different than the popular secular tone set by the Christmas season and prepa- ration for Christmas. So if you look at the Advent season you'll notice the liturgical colors for the Advent season are purple — I’m wearing a purple shirt right now be- cause it’s the first Sunday of Advent. Well, purple is always in the church a color of penance; it’s a penitential season. And although Advent is of course not as solemn a penitential season as Lent is, for example, at the same time the very colors that we use tell us that it should be a time of intensified spiritual exercises. Whether it be prayer, whether it be fasting, whether it be vigils like spending time staying awake waiting for Christ, reading his word, whatever it might be, however, what- ever exercises, praying the rosary. Whatever exercises you’re going to do to pre- pare there should be a difference between your spiritual exercises in Ordinary Time and your spiritual exercises in the Advent season. Because the Church is calling us to prepare for the coming of Jesus. Both his coming in the Feast of Christmas but also, in a sense, even more for his second coming at the end of time, for the final judgment, to get ready for the judgment.
And the reality, and you might be thinking while I’m saying this, well Dr. Pitre it's been 2000 years, he’s probably not coming back this year, right. Well you know he might not come back this Advent, but you might die this Advent. There are going to be people who die during this Advent season, who are going to encounter Christ, who are going to stand before the judgment seat of Christ in their particular judg- ment if not the final judgment. And no one of us Christians knows the day or hour of that encounter of our particular judgment. So it's prudent, it's wise for the church every year to call us to pray, to keep vigil, and to get ready to meet Jesus. That's what we’re doing during the Advent season.
GOSPEL, FIRST READING & PSALM TRANSCRIPT (Subscribe or Login for Full Transcript):
One of the things — you’ve probably had this experience — if you’ve ever read the lives of the Saints is the astounding spiri- tual strength of the Saints. Not just of their ability to fast, or to pray for hours on end, to establish monasteries and convents, to travel to the ends of the earth to make disciples of Jesus like the missionary orders, but their spiritual strength in the power of their holiness. The power of their ability to convert souls to Christ, to draw people to Jesus, flows out of the fact that they’ve been engaged in spiritual exercises, right. There not just lounging about; they’re not just laying about. They’re trying to grow every single day in holiness, in prayer, in fasting, in reading the word of God, in teaching and preaching. And so I don’t know about you, but whenever I read the lives of the Saints I feel like a spiritual wimp, right. Maybe you’ve had this experience: you buy one of these exercise videos and you start to watch these people who have been training and exercising every day and then you try to do what they do and you can’t. Why? Well because you’re not strong enough. The same thing is true in the life of holiness, right. We have to perform spiritual exercises if we want to be strong, if we want to grow in strength. We can’t just assume that because we’re baptized we’re going to be strong. No, baptism makes us a child of God but it doesn't make us an adult; it doesn't bring us into spiritual adulthood. In order to be an adult we have to learn, we have to grow, but we also have to exercise. We have to exercise our spiritual faculties.
So, I think this is fascinating and real important that at the very beginning of the liturgical year the church places before us the exhortation to grow in strength. To pray, to keep vigil, and to prepare ourselves for the coming of Jesus through spiri- tual exercises. And that should set a tone for our Advent season that may be some- what different than the popular secular tone set by the Christmas season and prepa- ration for Christmas. So if you look at the Advent season you'll notice the liturgical colors for the Advent season are purple — I’m wearing a purple shirt right now be- cause it’s the first Sunday of Advent. Well, purple is always in the church a color of penance; it’s a penitential season. And although Advent is of course not as solemn a penitential season as Lent is, for example, at the same time the very colors that we use tell us that it should be a time of intensified spiritual exercises. Whether it be prayer, whether it be fasting, whether it be vigils like spending time staying awake waiting for Christ, reading his word, whatever it might be, however, what- ever exercises, praying the rosary. Whatever exercises you’re going to do to pre- pare there should be a difference between your spiritual exercises in Ordinary Time and your spiritual exercises in the Advent season. Because the Church is calling us to prepare for the coming of Jesus. Both his coming in the Feast of Christmas but also, in a sense, even more for his second coming at the end of time, for the final judgment, to get ready for the judgment.
And the reality, and you might be thinking while I’m saying this, well Dr. Pitre it's been 2000 years, he’s probably not coming back this year, right. Well you know he might not come back this Advent, but you might die this Advent. There are going to be people who die during this Advent season, who are going to encounter Christ, who are going to stand before the judgment seat of Christ in their particular judg- ment if not the final judgment. And no one of us Christians knows the day or hour of that encounter of our particular judgment. So it's prudent, it's wise for the church every year to call us to pray, to keep vigil, and to get ready to meet Jesus. That's what we’re doing during the Advent season.