Whenever I preside at Mass, I say this
prayer after the Our Father: “the blessed hope and the coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ.” My own death, whenever
God wills it, is end enough for me. Yet,
I feel sincere when I pray this prayer, for in the Christian and Cistercian
tradition, there are a number of ways that the Lord comes and puts an end to the
world. When he came in the flesh from
Mary's womb and lived among us, taught us, healed many of us, suffered and died
and rose again, he ended the power of the “world” - the satanic powers and the
power of our own fallen nature to destroy us. His Spirit poured out on us gives us the possibility of living in the
new creation. So, the first coming of
the Lord Jesus in the flesh presents us with his second coming through the Holy
Spirit forming us into the likeness of Christ, both individually and
corporately as the Body of Christ which is the Church.
We all have a long way to go in
becoming Christ, but we are on the way. While we are on the way, God in Christ
though the Holy Spirit is constantly coming to us to end the worldliness in us
as individuals and as Church and through the Church to end the blindness of the
world to the reality of the God and our brothers and sisters and all creation
which we were called to cherish from the beginning
God is always coming to us at every
moment with his love and strength and healing, ending the life and world of the
“old man” and giving life to the “new man in Jesus Christ.” Certainly I pray for that as does Saint Paul: “Brothers
and sisters: May the Lord make you increase and abound in love for one another
and for all, just as we have for you, so as to strengthen your hearts, to be
blameless in holiness before our God and Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus
with all his holy ones. Amen.” We see that talking about our sanctification
leads right into the end of everything as we know it. Real holiness does indeed look forward to
what the Cistercians of old celebrated as the third coming of Christ at the end
of time, what most Christians call Christ's Second Coming which is the ultimate
New Beginning. The End is the Beginning.
Photograph by Father Emmanuel. Excerpts from Father Luke's Homily for the First Sunday of Advent.