Hebrews 13:17-21
Luke 13:10-17
It is all too
easy to fall into despair over the violence, hatred, and depravity that we see
in the world today; if we are not careful, these dark forces can easily inspire
a paralyzing fear in our own souls. In these weeks of the Nativity Fast that focus
on joyful preparation for the coming of Christ, it is a temptation to lose hope
that the Prince of Peace is really coming to bless, save, and heal us. Part of our challenge this Advent is to
recognize that temptation for what it is:
a temptation not to entrust ourselves, our loved ones, and this world to
the only One Who can deliver us from the worry, pain, and loss that we know all
too well, and that can easily overwhelm us.
Today’s gospel
passage introduces us to a woman who had been overcome physically by illness, being
stooped over for eighteen years. Just
imagine how tempted she must have been to abandon hope; perhaps she had wondered
many times how she could go on from one day to the next. People have certainly
lost faith and grown bitter over much less. But she had come to worship in the
synagogue on the day when Christ was there teaching. We do not know if she knew that the Messiah
would be there, but when He saw her, He healed her and she praised and thanked God.
In response to those who criticized Him for healing on the Sabbath day, the
Lord noted that people routinely take care of their animals on the day of
rest. So how could it not be permissible
to free a daughter of Abraham from her bondage of so many years on the Sabbath? He did not come to add to the burden of
suffering people or to sit idly by due to a technicality, but to set us
free.
The good news is that we are all the sons and
daughters of Abraham by faith in Jesus Christ. He is born to loose us all from
the various forms of slavery, sickness, sin, and death that hold us captive.
Perhaps that is why He was born in a time and place of violence and hatred,
with His life at risk even as a small child from a jealous and bloodthirsty ruler. Perhaps that is why He lived in a world where
people of different religions, political affiliations, and ethnic backgrounds
despised and tried to kill one another. That
is certainly why He accepted death on the Cross at the hands of both Jews and Gentiles
in order to reconcile all humanity to God and to one another through His
glorious resurrection on the third day. He
came to loose the entire creation from its bondage to corruption and to bring
us all into the new heaven and earth of His blessed and eternal Kingdom. He is
truly the Second Adam in Whom all the sorrows and divisions of the first Adam
are healed, set right, and restored.
Remember the
troubled and dangerous times in which Christ brought salvation to the
world. Recall the trials and
tribulations of the prophets, apostles, martyrs, and confessors from biblical
times to today. Think about how the
ordinary way of St. Nicholas required daily commitment, sacrifice, and the
acceptance of sorrows. A religion the
main symbol of which is the Cross is not one that looks at the world with
rose-colored glasses. And if we allow ourselves to be shocked by the world’s
problems or our own personal struggles to the point that we fall into despair
or simply embrace the darkness out of fear, we will have no part in the One
born at Christmas for our salvation.
We simply face
the same temptations and difficulties that fallen humanity has always faced in
one form or another. It is through such
difficult circumstances that faithful people come to shine with the light of
the heavenly Kingdom. That was true of
St. Nicholas, and it will also be true of us, if we follow his example of daily
obedience in the ordinary details of our lives.
If we pray from the depths of our souls, love and serve our neighbors, forgive
our enemies, hold fast to the truth, call on the Lord’s mercy when we fall
short, and then get back on track, we will grow in holiness to the point that
we will be ready to welcome our Savior at His birth this year with joyful and
hopeful hearts. That is the simple way
of St. Nicholas. Regardless of the
world’s problems or our own personal struggles, this must also be our way in the
remaining weeks of the Nativity Fast.
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