Second Sunday of Advent
8 December 2024
Church Year C

Into the Desert
Luke 3:1-6
Fr. Steven G. Oetjen


Reprinted by permission of "The Arlington Catholic Herald"

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Every year during Advent, the figure of St. John the Baptist is placed before us. 

He calls out to us with the same urgent message of repentance: “Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths.”  Today, let us reflect for a moment on the place in which he does this. 

The Gospel tells us that the word of God came to John “in the desert.”  This is the place he preached, and this is the place where great crowds of people came to listen.  This is significant.  If people wanted to hear him, they had to leave behind the comfort of their homes, the familiarity of their villages and cities, and go out into the wilderness.  They did not go to the theater, as if to be entertained.  They did not go to the marketplace, as if to engage in commerce.  Nor could they simply sit on their couches and tune in to listen on the radio, the television or a livestream.  They had to leave the world of comfort, of superficiality, of business as they knew it, and go out into the desert to hear John.

Clearly, something was drawing them.  They recognized something in Joh the Baptist’s words that they were not fining elsewhere.  There is truth in what he says.  There is something much more real here, more important than all those things that they were normally preoccupied with.  Even if it meant going out into the desert to find it, they were willing to go.

We have the same need as they did.  We need to hear the voice of the prophet, the word of God.  We need to hear the truth – not just any truth, but that all-important truth that is deeper than the concerns that normally dominate our attention.  And, in order to hear it, we need to leave ‘behind those worldly cares that crowd it out.  We need to go out into the desert ‘if ‘we are to hear ‘the voice crying out in the desert.  The word of God is there for us, if only we would listen.

Here is an example of a subtle way we might be unwilling to go into the desert, where we can truly hear the word.  Sometimes, we are tempted by the thought, “I wish the Bible were more relevant.  I wish it spoke to my everyday life.”  This seems at first glance to be a good thought.  After all, we should not want the Bible to be irrelevant to us.  But the danger is that we pay little attention to what the Bible says when it is not immediately apparent what the application is.  Or, in trying to pay attention to it and make it “relevant,” we end up taking it and fitting it into the world of “my thoughts” and “my preoccupations.”  We risk watering it down, reducing it to just “a cute little story,” something I can distill a little lesson from, but which does not really change my life.  The danger is that we may fail to leave out own world; we fail to go out to meet the Bible on its own terms.

If we do choose to leave our own preoccupations behind and enter into the biblical narrative, we find that our lives make sense there.  I find my own life in that story.  In the Scriptures, we find something much more real, much more meaningful, much truer than all the narratives the world tries to tell us.  It is not a matter of fitting the Bible into my world or into my sense of what is relevant.  It’s about fitting myself - finding myself – in the world of the Bible.  In other words, the Bible is not what needs to change to accommodate me.  I need to change to accommodate it. 

The Bible does, however, need to be opened for us.  Maybe we do not understand it, and maybe that is not our faith.  But the key is the willingness to be taken up into it, not simply to reduce it to my level.  This means getting out into the wilderness to hear the prophet, not trying to bring the prophet into my own world of superficial concerns.

And after all, this is the call of John the Baptist: repentance, a radical change of life.  His listeners were already pretty far along, since they had shown themselves willing to leave their familiar, comfortable lives behind for a while to go out to the wilderness to hear him.  Are we?

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