THE JOY OF ADVENT
By Thierry Maertens & Jean Frisque
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The announcement of John the Baptist’s birth has put in relief the salient
traits of his personality. The circumstances of his birth hardly add new
elements. Neither the birth nor the circumcision are told for themselves. They
serve only as a framework for the imposition of the name already proclaimed by
the angel.
Thanks to the unexpected agreement of Zechariah and Elizabeth, the
name of John the Baptist appears to be willed by heaven. The healing of
Zechariah’s dumbness too is a sign of a heavenly manifestation. Luke dwells on
the astonishment and joy caused by the manifestation. These are characteristic
symptoms of messianic times. The swiftness with which the news spreads,
image of the swiftness of the spread of the gospel, is also a sign of the presence of
heaven among human beings.
At the very time these two first chapters of Luke were first put out, the
contemporary world was singularly bereft of joy. The Jewish nation was
crushed under the heel of an occupying power, while the Greek peoples were
reduced by apathy to alienation.
Are things very different now, with uneasiness on every horizon, in a
world where the majority of people are ignored and alienated?… Yet Luke’s
message remains valid. Joy resides in the assurance that one has communion
with God, and that God is present even in human events. It is not however an
immediate consequence of belief in God’s presence. The God of the Jansenists
is not a joyful God, nor is the God of the pious. The God who gives joy is the God
who is present in the whole texture of a human being’s life, in secular activities,
in the most private thoughts and the deepest encounters, in sufferings that
surmount discouragement. The joy of messianic times is this joy.