They shall
obtain joy and gladness,
And sorrow and sighing shall flee away. (Is. 35:10)
And sorrow and sighing shall flee away. (Is. 35:10)
At last we
come to that Sunday in Advent known as Gaudete (Joy). On this Sunday, pink as a
symbol of our joy, is worn at Mass and the candle in the Advent wreath that is pink, is lit as well. We read in the Old and New
Testaments about the joy of our salvation in Jesus Christ.
The peoples
of the Old Testament had joy because they anticipated a time when the promised
Messiah would come and “those who have been ransomed by the Lord...will enter Jerusalem singing,
crowned with everlasting joy. Sorrow and mourning will disappear, and they will
be filled with joy and gladness”.
Today, our
joy is anchored in the knowledge that God fulfilled His promise of a Savior- the
One who came to free us from the shackles of original sin.
At this
time of year, in the depth of deep darkness- it is dark here by 4:30 P.M.- we will celebrate the winter Solstice- the
longest day of the year. It can be a reminder of the joy that seems to be lacking in our
world at large. There is no room for hope, no possible way to feel anything but
misery. But this is not the thinking of
one who understands the true meaning of Advent- of why the Child is born in us,
year after year, decade after decade, century after century, and will continue
to be born until the end of time.
We as Christians
should be a people full of joy, and Catholics
more so because the “cause of our joy” is ever with us in the Eucharist.
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