Fr Tristan Writes 15th December 2024
Gaudete Sunday calls us to rejoice in the Lord's coming, which is very soon! We hear about "rejoicing" in many of the texts of the Mass this week, but, to our modern ears, the sentiment can seem at odds with the tenor of the Gospel passage, in which John the Baptist describes the Son of God as coming at the end of time to judge between God's faithful and the wicked. He uses the image of a farmer coming with fork in hand, gathering up the good part of the wheat, meanwhile throwing the useless husks into an "unquenchable fire" (cf. Luke 3:17). Sobering, yes - but not very joyful sounding!
Perhaps this difficulty arises because we tend to equate joy with the freedom to follow our own pleasures wherever they take us. True joy, however, is much deeper. It is a fruit of love, itself the effect of the Holy Spirit. St Thomas Aquinas explains that joy is a passion we feel because we love the good that is in someone else. It doesn't matter whether that person is near to us or far away: as long as that good remains in them, we are joyful, because of the love that springs from our knowledge of that good. The knowledge that he is coming to seal a final victory over Death and to offer the triumph of Life to us - a good which can never be taken away - means that unending joy is possible for those who love him. It might be a quiet thing that we do not always 'feel', but, like a river running underground, it gives life to all our actions.
It is good in the run-up to Christmas to stop worrying for a few minutes over lists of food to buy, presents to find, cards to write, and so on, to make another list: things to be thankful for. Start with the things that God Himself has done, is doing and will do: from the creation of the world, to Christ's kingship in heaven. This kind of prayer helps nurture the fruit of joy, and also humility. We will find that we have much to rejoice in for which we never asked and which we never deserved. It also reminds us that, above all, it is a joy to share our time with God, and to share what He has generously given us with others.







