Bible On Call
- Scripture Reflection, August 31: Teamwork with God
- Scripture Reflection, August 24: From 'Rocky' to 'Rock'
- Scripture Reflection, August 17, Tenacious Faith
- Scripture Reflection, August 10, 2008: Take courage!
- Scripture Reflection, August 3: Eyes of Compassion
- Scripture Reflection, July 27: Pearl of Great Price
- Scripture Reflection, July 20: Compassion is Power
- Scripture Reflection, July 13: The Sower and the Seed
- Scripture Reflection, July 6: The Gentle Mastery of Christ
- Scripture Reflection, June 29: Heroes of Faith
- Scripture Reflection, June 22: Be Not Afraid
- Scripture Reflection, June 15: Many Are Called
- Scripture Reflection, June 8: The Much in Meals
- Scripture Reflection, June 1: Extraordinary Generosity
- Scripture Reflection, May 25: Connections Made to Last
- Scripture Reflection, May 18: Holy Trinity Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 11: Pentecost Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 4: The Feast of the Ascension
- Scripture Reflection, April 27: Speaking and Living Our Faith
- Scripture Reflection, April 20: Our Future Heavenly Home
- Scripture Reflection, April 13: Good Shepherd Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, April 6: The Ultimate Servant
- Scripture Reflection, March 30: Inspirational Stories of Faith
- Easter Reflection: Alleluia, He is Risen!
- Good Friday Reflection and Podcast
- Holy Thursday Reflection & Podcast
- Scripture Reflection, March 16: Palm Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, March 9: The Raising of Lazarus
- Scripture Reflection, March 2: Open to Possibilities
- Scripture Reflection, February 24: First Impressions
- Scripture Reflection, February 17: Human AND Divine
- Scripture Reflection, February 10: Appreciating Lent
- Scripture Reflection, February 3: A Dose of Humility for the Super Bowl
- Scripture Reflection: Now Free to Grow in Love
- Scripture Reflection, January 20: Servants of Reconciliation
- Scripture Reflection, January 13: The Baptism of the Lord
- Scripture Reflection, January 6: Beyond Our Expectations
- Advent Reflection, December 23: "God Is with Us"
- Advent Reflection, December 16: “Loved by the Son of God”
- Advent Reflection, December 9: Patient Expectancy
- Scripture Reflection, December 2: A Vision of Peace
- Scripture Reflection, November 25: Christ the King
- Scripture Reflection, November 18: The Meaning of Reverence
- Scripture Reflection, November 11: The Traditionally Printed Word
- Scripture Reflection, November 4: Risk, Hospitality and Justice
- Scripture Reflection, October 28: The Promise of More
- Scripture Reflection, October 21: “I lift up my eyes to the mountains”
- Scripture Reflection, October 14: Words
- Scripture Reflection, October 7: Singing the Same Song
- Scripture Reflection, September 30: Direct Gazes on the Face of Christ
- Scripture Reflection, Sunday, September 23: Love Is Ingenious
- Scripture Reflection, September 16: Finding Home
- Scripture Reflection, September 9: A Perfect Example of Christian Discipleship
- Scripture Reflection, September 2: Humility Does Matter
- Scripture Reflection, August 26: A Faithfully Present Christ
- Scripture Reflection, August 19: The "ordinariness" of Christian Discipleship
- Scripture Reflection, August 12: Bringing Life to Others
- Scripture Reflection, August 5: Growing Rich in the Sight of God
- Scripture Reflection, July 29: Two Essential Attitudes
- Scripture Reflection, July 22: Models of Hospitality
- Scripture Reflection, July 15: The Good Samaritan
- Scripture Reflection, July 8: Christian Understanding of Freedom
- Scripture Reflection, July 1: Our Adventurous Lives
- Scripture Reflection, June 24: Becoming A Light to the Nations
- Scripture Reflection, June 17: Courageous Reconciliation
- Scripture Reflection, June 10: Corpus Christi
- Scripture Reflection, June 3: Trinity Sunday
- Scripture Reflection, May 27: The Feast of Pentecost
- Scripture Reflection, May 20: The Ascension of Jesus
- Sunday Reflection, May 13
- Scripture Reflection, May 6: Dungy’s Gift to Grieving Parents
- Scripture Reflection, April 29: The Good Shepherd
- Scripture Reflection, April 22: “Do you love me?”
- Sunday Reflection, April 15: Touch the Wounds
- Sunday Reflection, April 8: Easter Sunday 2007
- Holy Thursday Reflection, April 5: Holy Thursday 2007
- Sunday Reflection, April 1: The Essentials for Christian Discipleship
- Sunday Reflection, March 25: Throw your stones away and parking tickets, too
- Sunday Reflection, March 18: The Welcome Home
- Sunday Reflection, March 11: A Lenten Summons
- Sunday Reflection, March 4: God, the Giver of Abundance
- Sunday Reflection, February 25: No More Peer Pressure
- Sunday Reflection, February 18: Loving Our Enemies?
- Sunday Reflection, February 11: The Beatitudes
- Sunday Reflection, February 4: Extraordinary Encounters
- Sunday Reflection, January 28: Truth Spoken in Love
- Sunday Reflection, January 21: Inspiring News for Life
- Sunday Reflection, January 14: An Abundance of Gifts, Not Threats
- Sunday Reflection, January 7: The Football Fans’ Search for Hope
- Christmas Reflection: The Significance of Stuffed Animals and Jesus
- Advent Reflection, December 17: Life Lessons at a Coffee Bar
- Advent Reflection, December 10: 'Good News' for Rejoicing
- Advent Reflection, December 3: The Gift of Hope
- Sunday Reflection, November 26: “Your Kingdom Come, Your Will Be Done”
- Sunday Reflection, November 19: A Glimpse of God’s Faithfulness
- Sunday Reflection, November 12: Giving the Little That We Have
- Sunday Reflection, November 5: BEING the Great Commandment
- Sunday Reflection, October 29: Courage in Jericho
- Personal Reflection, October 22: Servant Leadership
- Sunday Reflection, October 15: Naming What's Important
- Sunday Reflection, October 8: Our responsibilities are God’s blessings
- Sunday Reflection, October 1: Open to the Spirit
- Sunday Reflection, September 24: Who’s the greatest?
- Sunday Reflection, September 17: Our Treasured Images of Christ
- Sunday Reflection, September 10: “He has done all things well.”
- Sunday Reflection, September 3: Conversion of Heart
- Sunday Reflection, August 27: Our Choice to Follow
- Sunday Reflection, August 20: Unity in a Divided World
- Sunday Reflection, August 13: On the Road of Discipleship
- Sunday Reflection, August 6: "I Know a Man"
- Sunday Reflection, July 30: The Abundance of Fragments
- Sunday Reflection, July 16: Our Mission if we choose to accept
- Sunday Reflection, July 2: The Grace of Desperation?
- Sunday Reflection, June 25: The Calming Presence of Christ
- Sunday Reflection, June 18: Serving Up a Banquet
- Sunday Reflection, June 11: The Trinity, A Communion of Life and Love
- Pentecost Sunday: Tuned Into the Spirit
- Sunday Reflection, May 28: The Presence of the Absent Jesus
- Sunday Reflection, May 21: The Sign of True Friendship
- Scripture Reflection, May 14: The Garrison Keillor STRETCH
- Sunday Reflection, May 7: An Encounter with Jean Vanier
- Easter: Memories that Give Hope, Peace and Love
- Good Friday Reflection: Overwhelmed by John
- Holy Thursday Reflection: Three Days, One Liturgy
- Palm Sunday Reflection: In Gratitude for Good Mentors
- Memorial of Cardinal Bernardin
- The Christian Life
- Praying With the Scriptures
- The Reluctant Prophet
- Bible On Call
Advent Reflection, December 16: “Loved by the Son of God”
Scripture Readings:
Isaiah 35: 1-6, 10
Psalm 146
James 5: 7-10
Matthew 11: 2-11
As I was thinking about the Scripture readings for this Sunday, the memory of my stepfather came to mind. My stepfather, Paul, died in 1985, just a year after I was ordained a priest. He was declining physically during the last couple of years of his life and spent a fair amount of time watching television. When I would visit home, I would often watch TV with him, especially football and basketball games, which Paul loved. He also enjoyed Christmas specials. His favorite Christmas story of all was the little operetta written in 1951 by Carlo Menotti entitled “Amahl and the Night Visitors.” I can still picture him in his chair watching “Amahl” with great attention and feeling.
Carlo Menotti was an Italian born playwright who moved to Philadelphia. He composed “Amahl and the Night Visitors” specifically for television. In this charming little story, he depicts the tragic lot of Amahl, a shepherd boy who lives with his impoverished mother at the time of Jesus’ birth. Amahl is crippled and uses a crutch to walk. He and his mother are so poor that they have been forced to sell all of their sheep and are at the point of begging. But on this one mystical night they are visited by the three kings, who need a place for rest and warmth as they follow the star on their way to take their gifts to the child who will be king.
The story is laced with many humorous details and the mischievous antics of the boy and the kings. These kings seem more zany and clumsy than regal. Amahl looks at the third king, Kaspar, and he laughs out loud because Kaspar’s long robe does not fit, his gold crown is crooked, and his shoes do not match – one is gold while the other is purple.
The climax of the story comes after Amahl’s mother is caught trying to take a few of the gold coins out of the chest that the kings have brought as a gift for the Christ child. She is hoping to get just enough to feed her son. I can still picture my stepfather sitting on the edge of his chair at this moment in the story. Amahl springs into action to protect his mother, who realizes what she has done and becomes very repentant. After her apology, she and Amahl begin to ponder what kind of gift they might be able to offer this child. Amahl reflects that perhaps this child will be born crippled, too. So he lifts his crutch in order to give it to one of the three kings, so that it might be brought to the Christ child. And in that very moment, Amahl discovers that his bad leg, which had felt completely dead, begins to feel warm and strong. He takes a step, and then another step, and then he begins to jump up and down and to dance around the room. The three kings and his mother cry out in unison, “He walks! He walks!” When Amahl’s mother begins to worry that her son might hurt himself with all of this leaping about, the kings reassure her: “Good woman, you must not be afraid; for he is loved by the Son of God.”
In that marvelous operetta, which always caused my stepfather to sneak his handkerchief out of his back pocket, Carlo Menotti succeeded in capturing much of what we believe as we prepare for our celebration of the birth of Christ. In its humorous and its more profound moments, this story communicates something of what it means that God has come to visit the world in Christ. The God revealed in Jesus is the God of life, the God who passionately desires life for his people. In the climactic scene in which Amahl lifts his crutch, Menotti portrays the power of a gift. He shows that the very act of giving ourselves to another can bring healing to us, can transform us. And in the kings’ words to the mother, Menotti grasped a profound truth that each of us is called to ponder in this season: “You must not be afraid, for he -- for each one of us -- is loved by the Son of God.”
The Scripture readings for this Sunday awaken our deepest hopes for what is possible. They unearth our most sublime yearning for healing and life. The beautiful poem from the book of Isaiah paints a vivid portrait of God’s coming to visit his people. It is then that the ransomed are set free and sorrow and mourning flee. This is what God is like; this is what God does. In the gospel, John sends some of his disciples to ask Jesus the all-important question: “Are you the one who is to come, or should we look for another?” Jesus, are you the awaited one? Are you the one in whom we find salvation? Jesus does not reply by offering a theological argument. He simply points to what he does: the blind see, cripples walk, lepers are cured, the dead are raised, the poor receive good news. These are Jesus’ “credentials.” This is his “calling card.”
In the world in which you and I live and struggle each day, a world marked by many shadows, hope for salvation still lies deep within us. This hope is the most powerful driving force within us. It is ultimately what moves us to act, even when we make mistakes and choose the wrong things. In his recent encyclical, Spe Salvi, Pope Benedict XVI calls this “the great hope.” Benedict writes that our “great, true hope, which holds firm in spite of all disappointments can only be God – God who has loved us and who continues to love us ‘to the end,’ until all ‘is accomplished’” (n. 27). This is our abiding hope for the reign of God.
We know only too well that the reality of the reign of God is terribly incomplete and unfulfilled. The disabled, the hungry and homeless, the ill, addicted and depressed, the imprisoned are all around us. We live with daily reports of war and terrorism, conflicts in which some of our own relatives and friends are directly engaged. Our country grapples with the specter of torture and the implications of that for our own integrity as a nation. And each of us is aware of his or her own personal disabilities, whether they are obvious to others or remain hidden.
As Christians, however, we are still called to live as people who are suffused with the virtue of hope. This is something much deeper than a superficial optimism that is blind to reality. Christian hope is a God-given power within us that is based on God’s having visited the world in Christ. It is grounded in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. It is this Jesus who teaches us in word and action that God is not an aloof and distant deity who remains eternally blissful in himself. Nor is God the one who sends evil, in whatever form it afflicts people. The mystery of evil and the suffering that results from evil is very real in our world and often in our lives. Our faith does not offer us a neat-and-clean “solution” to this mystery. But the gospel discloses to us the God of life, the God who is faithfully, tenaciously on the move to overcome the power of evil and suffering in the world. And God enlists us in this life-giving work. This is the God for whom we long in this season of Advent. We desire the fullness of God’s reign in our lives and our world.
In Menotti’s operetta, Amahl discovers that it is in the very act of giving that he experiences God’s healing touch. In this Advent season, we renew our trust in the power of God to transform our world and our lives, to heal and give new life. May we follow Jesus more faithfully in giving of ourselves to others and so experience anew the life that he offers us.

