Homily For The 4th Sunday Of Advent, Year A.
Isaiah
7:10-14; Psalm 24:1-6; Romans 1:1-7; Matthew 1:18-24.
“EMMANUEL:
GOD-IS-WITH-US!”
By:
Rev. Fr. Charles Onyeka Ezejide
· Today
is the fourth and last Sunday of Advent. If you like, you can call it ‘rush hour Sunday.’ We cannot help but notice the mad rush to engage in the last
minutes of shopping and preparation for Christmas, both physical and spiritual.
· Christmas
is barely a week from today, the countdown has started, and this last Sunday of
Advent still gives us yet another opportunity to put our hearts and house in
order.
· Dearly
beloved in Christ, it is painful to observe that the Advent season, rather than
a time of preparation for the birth of the Saviour of the world, has become an
ADVERT season, where we sell all kinds of goods at exorbitant prices to make
surplus gains. We buy and buy, even things we don't need, to ensure our
houses are fully stocked for Christmas. While that is necessary, how much
spiritual stock and strength have you and I gathered in preparation for the
birth of Jesus?
· Today,
the Lord draws our attention to the essentials of the season, even when the
accidentals add colour to the celebration, but to what end will it be to
celebrate accidentals while neglecting the essentials, which is that the coming
of Emmanuel is near.
· The
essentials remain that the season is about Christ and not about us or our relatives,
friends, and visitors. Jesus Christ remains and continues to be the reason for
the season. Christ is both the chief host and the chief guest at Christmas.
· The
Christ we are expecting at Christmas is a spiritual being; our preparation
should and must be first spiritual before including material preparation.
· Some
of us are still in doubt about the imminence of the Son of God. We take things
for granted, thereby living in sin and recklessness. We enjoy the season of
Christmas without being enjoined to the joy of Christmas, which is that
“God-is-with-us”. We are in the celebration, but of the celebration. Because
those who are of the celebration are those who have adequately prepared
themselves and are spiritually ready.
· The
birth of Jesus is both a historic and spiritual event. The gospel reading (Matthew
1:18-24) gives us a historical account of how Jesus came to be – he is the
child of the Spirit. We see the purpose for the birth of Jesus: “She will give
birth to a son, and you must name him Jesus because he is the one who is to
save his people from their sins” (Matt. 1:21). In this, we see that the human
birth of Jesus was for our salvation. Hence, if there were no Christmas, there
could be no “Good Friday”.
· The
gospel reading began with confusion in the mind of Joseph about the possibility
of Mary having a child despite being a virgin. His decision to quietly divorce
Mary was informed by his feeling of unworthiness to partake of the divine plan.
His fear was borne out of humility and nothingness in the presence of the
divine. He simply cannot imagine himself being part of such a divine plan. He
had to be out of the picture. Just and humble man that he is, Joseph decided to
divorce Mary quietly so as not to expose her to the law. At this point, the
angel appeared to him in a dream to assure him: “Do not be afraid!” In other
words, God is telling him, “Take courage! Do not be afraid!” The gospel
concludes by stating that “a virgin shall conceive and bear a son who is called
Emmanuel – God is with us” (Matt. 1:23).
· The
second reading (Romans 1:1-7) also gives us the attributes and characteristics
of this child who is to be born at Christmas, and that we share in his life and
mission, especially with the invitation to be saints, which means to live a
holy life, a life that is befitting of those waiting to receive Jesus at
Christmas.
· The
realisation that God is with us should fill every Christian with courage,
faith, hope, and confidence, knowing that in all you do and say God is with us.
Both the first and gospel reading reminds us to have courage and live through
life because God is with us, and what that means is that we should live in the
consciousness that Christ is with us in whatever we do or whatever we are going
through.
· So
when we are feeling low and discouraged, when our prayers are delayed, when our
finances are not commensurate with our hard work, when ill health pulls us down
when the economy is biting hard on us, when the home is no longer home, when
people conspire against us, when you are going through any kind of difficulty,
know it today and always that despite all of these, God-is-with-us! He has not
abandoned us, and he will never abandon us. He would rather make things better
in his time.
· It
is about Christ, who is coming to renew our strength; it is about him who is coming
to fire us up with the light of the Holy Spirit at Christmas. We must make
adequate preparations for him in our hearts.
· In
making these preparations, we must shun sin, pretence, fake lives, and sharp
practices in the bid to have a flamboyant Christmas. If God must be with us,
then we must prepare and be without sin, and when we have purged ourselves of
sin, we can now, like the Psalmist, say “Let the Lord enter! The king of Glory”
(Ps. 24:1).
· May
the Lord reign in our lives as the king of glory and may he fill us with the
consciousness that he is with us always until the end of time through Christ
our Lord, Amen!
· Happy
Sunday!!!
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