Fr Tristan Writes 14th December 2025
'Bid the Lord welcome!' Our theme of "Welcome" for this Advent emerges once again in the readings and texts of this Sunday, which is called 'Gaudete Sunday' after the Latin word that begins the Mass's Introit meaning "Rejoice!" After the challenging words of Jesus and St John the Baptist in the first two weeks of Advent, admonishing us to be ready for the Second Coming, in this week that theme continues, but with a new tone or shade shining through: a lightness, a joy, and to signify this the vestments of the Mass change colour on this Sunday from solemn purple to a lighter rose. The readings focus on the signs that accompany the arrival of the Messiah: the blind see, the lame walk, the dead are raised up… The justice of God is to be done! And that in itself, as much as it challenges us, also is a cause for great joy: salvation is at hand for sinners, and Death is to be no more! Joy is an essential effect of the spirit of welcome. When we no longer resist Christ, who knocks at the heart's door and waits for us patiently to open it, anguish is extinguished, and joy begins to suffuse us. The strange thing about this is that this takes place even in the darkness, in painful experience. And when we welcome others, we experience God's welcoming joy in us AND spread it to others in the very same moment. A parish community where people make a genuine effort to love one another - smile, greet, pray, assist one another - is an extraordinary place, and a place of evangelisation that others want to be part of. St James reminds us of this today: "Do not grumble against one another, brothers and sisters… behold, the Judge is standing at the door." (Jas 5:9) This joy to each other does not always come naturally, but what a difference it makes. The Benedictine spiritual writer Dom Prosper Guéranger noted that joy may require a victory over self, writing that we must: 'make an effort to be cheerful […] Cheerfulness takes courage, as does everything else; and it is for God that we must overcome ourselves in this way. Rejoice in the Lord always, again I will say Rejoice…! We must pull the ground out from under the feet of that melancholy that is no good for either this world or the next.'
One very good reason to be joyful in this season is that we welcome among us Barnabas Mercer, a fourth-year seminarian for our diocese who will be spending the next 6 months with us as part of his formation for the priesthood. It is an amazing joy to see God calling young men into His service and to the service of His people. Please pray for him, welcome him - and pray for the others who will one day follow the same path, if it be God's will. Some of them are here in Horsham too!










