Welcome to PINS OF LIGHT!

Pins of Light: Scattered hints to provoke thought and talk about God...


This bible blog was launched for Advent 2007, and began as a daily reflection on scriptural readings until Easter of 2008.  Since every reflection posed a question to God, this initial portion of Pins of Light is called Questions for God.

From March 2008 to December 2009, Pins of Light has featured a weekly reflection on the Sunday readings.

Since 2008, Advent and Lenten recollections have also been conducted on line.   

In September 2010, this web site with its new look launches as the Sunday bible blogs resume.  I hope you enjoy reading them and stumble into some hints about God's whereabouts.

 

KILLJOY (Matthew 3:1-12): 05 December 2010 (2nd Sunday of Advent) PDF Print E-mail
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But today, the 2nd Sunday of Advent, we don’t meet angels, shepherds, or wise men. Instead we have John the Baptist. Not exactly the person we want to spend time with at our Christmas get-togethers. He would be such a kill-joy, the very type of person who would make you feel guilty that you’re enjoying the party. He would probably scowl disapprovingly at the ham and the cake and dump them for his usual diet of locusts and honey, not to mention that he would not exactly show up in the proper attire.

Also, if he were on Facebook, he would probably be posting statuses like: “Repent for the kingdom of God is at hand!” Or worse: “You brood of vipers!” In other words, no matter how you look at him, John the Baptist is bad news, and what he would post on Facebook are precisely what you don’t want to find in your news feed these days—or any other day. John the Baptist is just the type of person you would un-friend on Facebook without hesitation.

During Advent, we recall the mystery of how our Lord Jesus “became flesh and dwelt among us.” After all, that’s what Christmas is all about. But he didn’t just choose to dwell among us in general, but had certain preferences: He spent the greatest amount of time not on the usual preferred celebrities or glamorous and likeable people. Instead he preferred to be close to the rejects of society: the poor, the sick, the sinners especially the tax collectors, the prostitutes. In other words, the dregs and rejects of society. People most of us would rather not associate with.  Maybe one message that the Lord has for us in this season of Advent is to seek out these very people that the Lord prefers. The people in our lives whom, for whatever reason, we don’t like.

I was wondering why. Why do we need to do this? I thought of two reasons: Maybe because these are the people who need help. And maybe because it's the way for us to imitate the Lord.

I found a third reason in the Gospel reading. It never occurred to me before, but the prophet John the Baptist would fit in the same category: People whose company we don’t exactly enjoy, people we’d rather not spend time with or be seen with. But it is John the Baptist who was credited for preparing the way of the Lord, for straightening the path for Him, for pointing Him out for the Lord’s very disciples when he said: “Behold the Lamb of God!” The reason we should seek out the people we don’t like, to widen our circle to include those we usually exclude is that they will be John the Baptist in our lives. In God’s mysterious ways, it is these very people who will point us the way to the Lord. Advent is a season to stop excluding these people.