Catholic Exchange

Advent: Time for Conversion

During the weeks of Advent leading up to Christmas, you'll find many essays and op-eds lamenting the rampant materialism that accompanies the season.  By "materialism" the writers generally mean consumerism, the excessive focus on presents and gift-giving to the exclusion of Christ.  Indeed it's easy to let this consumerism distract us from the twofold purpose of Advent set forth in the Catechism of the Catholic Church:

When the Church celebrates the liturgy of Advent each year, she makes present this ancient expectancy of the Messiah, for by sharing in the long preparation for the Savior's first coming, the faithful renew their ardent desire for His second coming.

And yet there is another kind of materialism that often manifests itself during this season.  It suggests that, rather than spend Advent preparing oneself for the coming of our Lord by repenting of past sins and engaging in traditional penitential acts like fasting, almsgiving, and prayer, we ought to use this time almost exclusively to make a commitment to a very materially-oriented brand of social justice. 

 Now, social justice is a crucial part of the Gospel, as anyone who has read Matthew 25 will attest, but we need to put our spiritual houses in order first.  The Gospel is primarily about salvation — from sin.  As the Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us:  

Jesus accompanied His words with signs and miracles to bear witness to the fact that the Kingdom is present in Him, the Messiah. Although He healed some people, He did not come to abolish all evils here below but rather to free us especially from the slavery of sin.

Yet often this ordering of things is confused.  In an op-ed in a recent edition of my local diocesan paper, Father Ben Urmston, S.J., wrote, "The Eucharist is incomplete everywhere in the world as long as anyone is hungry anywhere in the world."  Aside from the tinge of liturgical Pelagianism that runs through such a statement, nowhere in the entire piece does he issue a call for repentance or personal conversion from sin.  It is in that sense spiritually bereft.

In the same edition, Sister Carol Gaeke, O.P., wrote a lengthy essay about the meaning of the symbols associated with the song "The Twelve Days of Christmas."  The song dates to England's Elizabethan era, and was a way for Catholics to use seemingly secular symbols to help catechize children in the faith during a time of great persecution. 

You wouldn't know it from Sister Gaeke's essay.  The cows in the "eight maids a'milking" are "symbols of our earth that needs to be tended and nurtured, not used up and destroyed by human greed."  In her mind the symbols form a puzzle, along the borders of which are "global warfare, nuclear weapons, domestic violence, sexual, class, and racial violence."  (No, I'm not making this up.)  The number of calls to conversion in Sister's essay?  Zero.

Likewise, in this month's Catholic Update pamphlet "Advent: Celebrating Promise, Joy, Hope," Father Ken Overberg, S.J., argues that John the Baptist's Advent message in Luke's Gospel is concerned with "profound social, economic and political challenges" like "corporate corruption" and "national policies of war and nuclear arms."  And, as in the case of Father Urmstom and Sister Gaeke, there is not one call to personal conversion that includes repentance, a fact that would make the Baptist roll in his grave.

These musings stand in stunning contrast to the vision of our late Holy Father Pope John Paul the Great.  In an Advent-themed address in 1994, he urged the faithful to point out "with fresh vigor to the men and women of today that Jesus Christ is the ‘Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world' (Jn 1:29)," and he requested that they work toward a conversion of heart by repenting of past sins.

Similarly, Pope Benedict XVI on December 4 of this year stated that the Gospel "invites us to prepare our hearts to receive [Christ.]  May Advent be a time of purification that leads to love, as we look with hope to the dawn of his coming."

In the remaining days of Advent, let us heed the wisdom of John Paul the Great and Benedict and put first things first; let us indeed convert and prepare our hearts.  There will be time soon enough to attempt to solve the problems of the world. 

Comments

  1. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Well done, Mr. Leonardi! You have given form and words (quite good ones, I might add) to the very thoughts I have been having, but have had trouble articulating. When I say to people, especially those who denounce the Church because the world is not yet free of social ills, that the Catholic Church is not primarily a social assistance agency I get stares, usually followed by angry words. And that’s from the Catholics! What I get from the Protestants is far worse.
    It strikes me as odd that no one thinks to pummel the Baptist Church for not being a social justice agency. In fact, I can’t think of a single Protestant Church, with the possible exception of the Episcopal Church, that is thought of as having any sort of social justice obligation beyond whatever charity they are pleased to offer. Why do you suppose that is?
    I think everyone, including Protestants, hold the Catholic Church to a different, and higher standard because they really know She is different than anything else on Earth, whether they want to admit it or not. They are quite right in the knowledge that Mother Church is different, but still off the beam regarding the social justice angle, as you so deftly pointed out.
    Too many people seem to zoom right over the Biblical injunction in which Our Lord points out, “The poor you will always have with you.” We know this to be true, but of course that doesn’t relieve us of our obligation to do whatever we can to relieve their suffering. After all, if we had been in Bethlehem 2,006 years ago, we all like to think we would have gotten a blanket for the Baby, and some coffee for the Parents, at the very least, don’t we?
    Merry Christmas!

  2. Guest Avatar
    Guest

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    Oh, yes, ’tis the season – so I leave you with a Christmas message I give my grandchildren this year . . . and, my little gift to you . . . an Advent’s parting proclamation, from my heart to you and yours, that Love without yearns – even verily, ‘thirsts’ – for love within.

    O, what a wondrous image is dear Santa!
    Red heap of gift and mark of cheer;
    Twinkling eye and elf-combed face;
    Child’s friend to close out the year.

    O, what an unmatched place, what we call home!
    Where heart moves toward and heart is there.
    Where one belongs if no place else
    For all the radiance, advent of care.

    O, what glory of time’s seasons is Christmas!
    Good will has a stand in the cold
    And peace is sung in all the air
    That all embrace redemption of old.

    O, what a classy Infant is our Christ!
    Turning stable into a palace warm,
    Turning our faults into graced charms,
    And leading Home to free from harm.

    O, what a Priceless Person is our God!
    For it is God Who gives us all the rest.
    And of His truth and beauty as well
    That life be most and all be best.

    May God as His gift to you hold you and yours to His bosom – and never let go.

    I remain your obedient servant, but God’s first,

    Pristinus Sapienter

    (wljewell @mail.catholicexchange.com or …yahoo.com)

  3. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Mr. Leonardi has alot of food for thought because if you don’t change in the heart everything else will be foreign to us when it comes to serving God and our fellow man. As I always pray for and probably will till the day I die is for a heart free of the things that make it sinful: coldness, hardness, and stiffness. As we Catholics pray to Jesus sometimes, “Make my heart like unto yours.” Until that changes our efforts will have no substance. Merry Christmas.

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