(Type a title for your page here)
Be on Guard
by Jerry Fuller, OMI

Advent, the season, Jesus tells us, for being on guard. But, of course, Jesus tells us to be on guard our whole life. We look at some recent tragedies and see how quickly we can disappear. The flight of Payne Stewart' s Learjet from Miami to Dallas suffered some kind of pressurization leak, sending the plane on autopilot to Mina, North Dakota, to crash. Or the Flight 990 to Egypt that careened into the ocean 60 miles south of Nantucket probably at plus the speed of sound, breaking up into unimaginable parts.

We sympathize with the relatives of these people and we pray for those who died in these crashes. And yet we reflect, they boarded their planes in all innocence, as we would have, the last thing in their minds being that they would be dead before the day was out.

"Be on guard," Jesus says in today's gospel. Is his warning like the Christmas jingle "You better watch out, you better not shout...Santa Claus is comin' to town?" Hardly. Jesus is not telling us to be good for some reward. He is telling us to reform our lives and to live the gospel he came to preach--a gospel of justice and love, a gospel of peace and forgiveness, a gospel of service and community.

Why should we live Jesus' gospel? Not for the fear motive, that we might escape hell. No, but to fulfill all justice. We had sinned; we must repent and live like Jesus. He is with us now in faith, in our poor brothers and sisters. He will see us in heaven in glory. But fear of punishment is not the motive, as with Santa Claus, who will leave us without presents if we're not good. No, our motive in Jesus is reverence for the Almighty God who has redeemed us, set us free--yes, from sin, death and Satan--but mostly who has promised us happiness for living as His Son, Jesus, told us to...happiness now on earth, and full happiness in glory in heaven.

This waiting has many qualities to it.

John Brown shows the attitude Jesus is looking from us in our faith life. Can we say, "When His Majesty, God, does come, I shall be ready"?

Another story brings out the theme of "watching."

This reminds us of the saying: "Some people are so heavenly-minded, they're no earthly good." So we may ask, is there a clash between Jesus' telling us to be on guard, and at the same time to attend to what we're doing here and now? There is no clash if we don't break up our idea of heaven and earth as two distinct places. Jesus wants us to have a "heaven here on earth" by seeing him in the poorest, the lowliest, the most homeless. In helping these people, we cannot go wrong; we will not be caught napping on Cloud 9 when we should be doing the Lord's work here on earth. For the

Lord's work here on earth--that we care for the poor and lowly-- is precisely His will in heaven right here and now. This concern for our brother can be seen in the venerable story of two brothers.

So we're good, we live Jesus' commandment of love right here and now, not so that we'll go to heaven--for by grace we are already in heaven--but we do good to others because that is what keeps us living in Jesus. Jesus said whatever we do to those the least of his, we do to him. And wherever Jesus is, there is heaven.

"Waiting for God's reign means that we can find God in the most seemingly insignificant aspects of our lives. Henri Nouwen tells a wonderful story about a conversation with an older former professor of his. While they strolled over a beautiful campus, the professor told Nouwen, with a certain melancholy in his voice, 'You know...my whole life I have been complaining that my work was constantly interrupted, until I discovered that my interruptions were my work." The watchful person is not undone by dealing with the everyday concerns of the present.

The prophet known as Isaiah, in our first reading, offers an image that each of us might carry with us through the weeks of Advent: "We are the clay; you, God, are the potter." In other words, you, God, are our source and center, our creator, redeemer, mentor and guide. To be clay is to know that I am vulnerable, breakable and entirely dependent upon God. To be clay is to be a work in progress, willing to surrender my thoughts to God's thoughts, my ways to God's ways, my will to God's

Pottery was an everyday experience of the people of Isaiah's time. Theirs was a culture familiar with terra cotta jugs, bowls and plates. Clay amphorae, or jugs, were made to store wine, oil, honey, vinegar, medicine, grain and even money. Potters plied their trade with skill and speed, in order to meet the demands for their versatile but often fragile products.

Beginning with a lump of formless clay, thrown onto a rapidly turning wheel, the potter's deft fingers seemed capable of bringing to life and usefulness whatever he/she could imagine. If a piece broke or became uncentered, however, it soon resembled a lifeless, formless mass. To salvage it, the potter would rethrow the lump unto the center of his wheel and being again. In a sense, this is what the prophet desires for his people, namely, that God, their potter, would salvage them from their brokenness, re-center them and begin again to shape them in the divine image.

We might leave with something of a puzzler from Zorba the Greek. "Maybe you' re right, boss, It all depends on the way you look at it. Look, one day I had gone to a little village. An old grandfather of ninety was busy planting an almond tree. 'What, granddad!' I exclaimed, 'Planting an almond tree?' And he, bent as he was, turned around and said, 'My son, I carry on as if I should never die.' I replied, 'And I carry on as if I was going to die any minute.' Which of us was right, boss?"

References

1) "Relating the text," Pulpit Resource 27 (4): 38 (Logos Productions Inc., 6160 Carmen Ave. E., Inver Grove Heights MN 55076-4422), Oct., Nov., Dec. 1999.

2) Anthony P. Castle, Quotes and Anecdotes for Preachers and Teache s "Waiting on the Lord," (Kevin Mayhew Limited, Leigh-0n-the-Sea, Essex: 1979) pg 144.

3) "Homily model," Good News 26 (11): 404 (Liturgical Publications Inc., 2875 South James Drive, New Berlin WI 53151), Nov. 1999.

4) "Homily model," Good News 26 (11): 404 (Liturgical Publications Inc., 2875 South James Drive, New Berlin WI 53151), Nov. 1999.

5) Pa tricia Datchuk Sanchez, "Isaiah," Celebration 28 (11): 497 (Celebration, P.O. Box 419493, Kansas City MO 64141), Nov. 1999.

6) "Relating the text," Pulpit Resources 27 (4): 38 (Logos Productions Inc., 6160 Carmen Ave. E., Inver Grove Heights MN 55076-4422), Oct., Nov., Dec. 1999.

(Comments to Jerry at padre@tri-lakes.net. Jerry's book, Stories For All Seasons, is available at a discount through the Homiletic Resource Center.)