Advent Reflection 12/5/19

Verse to Meditate on Throughout the Day

“You, O Lord, are close and all your ways are truth. From of old, I have known of your decrees, for you are eternal.” (Cf. Ps. 119:151-152)


Morning Prayer
Stir up your power, O Lord, and come to our help with mighty strength, that what our sins impede the grace of your mercy may hasten.  [Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and rights with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever]

Prayer of Offering Throughout the Day
Accept, we pray, O Lord, these offerings we make, gathered from among your gifts to us, and may what you grant us to celebrate devoutly here below gain for us the prize of eternal redemption. Through Christ our Lord.


Verse at end of day
“Let us live justly and devoutly in this age, as we await the blessed hope and the coming of the glory of our great God” (Titus 2:12-13)
Longer Scripture Reading: Isaiah 16:1-5; 17:4-8


Advent Reflection: From a commentary on the Diatessaron by St Ephrem
(Sermo 5, In Adventu Domini,1-3: Opera Omnia, Edit. cisterc. 4 [1966], 188-190)

Keep Watch: He is to Come Again

To prevent his disciples from asking the time of his coming, Christ said: “About that hour no one knows, neither the angels nor the Son. It is not for you to know times or moments.” He has kept those things hidden so that we may keep watch, each of us thinking that he will come in our own day. If he had revealed the time of his coming, his coming would have lost its savour: it would no longer be an object of yearning for the nations and the age in which it will be revealed. He promised that he would come but did not say when he would come, and so all generations and ages await him eagerly.

Though the Lord has established the signs of his coming, the time of their fulfillment has not been plainly revealed. These signs have come and gone with a multiplicity of change; more than that, they are still present. His final coming is like his first. As holy men and prophets waited for him, thinking that he would reveal himself in their own day, so today each of the faithful longs to welcome him in his own day, because Christ has not made plain the day of his coming.

He has not made it plain for this reason especially, that no one may think that he whose power and dominion rule all numbers and times is ruled by fate and time. He described the signs of his coming; how could what he has himself decided be hidden from him? Therefore, he used these words to increase respect for the signs of his coming, so that from that day forward all generations and ages might think that he would come again in their own day.

Keep watch; when the body is asleep nature takes control of us, and what is done is not done by our will but by force, by the impulse of nature. When deep listlessness takes possession of the soul, for example, faint-heartedness or melancholy, the enemy overpowers it and makes it do what it does not will. The force of nature, the enemy of the soul, is in control.

When the Lord commanded us to be vigilant, he meant vigilance in both parts of man: in the body, against the tendency to sleep; in the soul, against lethargy and timidity. As Scripture says: “Wake up, you just,” and “I have risen, and am still with you;” and again, “Do not lose heart. Therefore, having this ministry, we do not lose heart.”