HOPE CHANGES EVERYTHING
Gather as a family/ community; create an environment appropriate for prayer (dress appropriately - switch off your phones...).
We are conscious that Christ is present not only in the Blessed Sacrament but also in the Scriptures and in our hearts. Even when we are on our own, we remain a part of the Body of Christ.
Place lighted candles, a crucifix, and the Bible on a covered table. These remind us of the sacredness of our time of prayer and could help us feel connected with our local worshipping communities.
You may sing or play an appropriate hymn. For instance:
The Sign of the Cross
Greeting and Introductory Words
L: The Lord invites us to the table of his Word: let us bless him for his goodness.
A: Blessed be God forever.
L: Today we begin the Liturgical Year and the Season of Advent. Advent reminds us that what the human heart deeply desires, God began to fulfil in the first Advent—the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus; and what God has begun in Christ Jesus, God will complete. We need to hope and do our part.
Let us pray that we may hope and work for the coming of God in our lives.
Penitential Rite
L: Let us prepare for his coming in our midst now and at the end of time in glory by asking him to pardon us for not waiting in hope!
Pause
L: Lord Jesus, you want us to stay awake,
for we do not know the day of your coming:
Lord, have mercy.
A: Lord, have mercy.
L: Lord Jesus, you tell us to be watchful,
for you want to us to experience your forgiveness and love:
Christ, have mercy.
A: Christ, have mercy.
L: Lord Jesus, you ask us to walk in your path
of peace, love, and justice: Lord, have mercy.
A: Lord, have mercy.
L: May almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and bring us to everlasting life.
A: Amen.
Opening Prayer
L: God of majesty and power,
keep your household watchful
and aware of the hour in which we live.
Hasten the advent of that day
when the sounds of war will be for ever stilled,
the darkness of evil scattered,
and all your children gathered into one.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God for ever and ever.
A: Amen.
THE LITURGY OF THE WORD
Readings
The readings are those assigned for the day in the Lectionary.
Preferably use a Bible/ Lectionary for reading.
Reading 1 Isaiah 2:1-5
Psalm Psalm 122: 1-2, 3-4, 4-5, 6-7, 8-9
Response Let us go rejoicing to the house of the Lord.
Reading 2 Romans 13:11-14
Acclamation
Alleluia, alleluia.
Show us Lord, your love;
and grant us your salvation.
Gospel Matthew 24:37-44
Reflection on the Readings
Use one of the following ways to reflect on the readings.
Lectio Divina
Imagine being among the disciples when Jesus says: “Stay awake! For you do not know on which day your Lord will come.” What thoughts and feelings do his words evoke: fear or hope?
Sunday Snippets
A school tutored its students, while they were in hospital, to stay abreast with their academics. Once, it sent a tutor to teach a boy nouns and adverbs, which his class was studying. The boy had been seriously injured in an accident.
When the tutor reached his room, she was unnerved by his state, and stammered: “Your school sent me to teach you nouns and adverbs.” The next day, a nurse asked her: “What did you do to that boy?” The teacher thought she had done something wrong and began to apologize. The nurse said: “No, no! Since yesterday, his attitude has changed; he’s fighting back, responding to treatment. It’s as though he’s decided to live.”
Later the boy explained that he had given up hope until the tutor arrived. Everything changed when he realized that “they wouldn’t send a teacher to work on nouns and adverbs with a dying boy!”
Hope changes everything!
Isaiah (first reading) writes during a period of wars and intrigue, alienation and division. In this time of discouragement, his is a message of hope: our faithful God is with us and is bringing us together. He predicts a time of unity and peace symbolized by people transforming “swords into ploughshares and spears into pruning hooks” (changing weapons of war into tools for growth).
This is the message we need today!
No matter where we live, there is uncertainty, violence, upheaval. We need to hope… and make it change everything. In Paul’s words to the Romans, we need to throw off the works of darkness and put on the armour of light; we need to live upright lives.
The gospel, too, is a hopeful reassurance that the Lord will come. We need to stay awake and be prepared.
God doesn’t send his Son into a “dying” world!
During this Advent season, will I hope and make it change everything? Will I allow light into places of darkness? Will I work for reconciliation and unity in my family/ community/ society? What swords do I need to beat into ploughshares and what spears into pruning hooks?
Questions to Ponder
Reflect on some (or all) of the following questions:
Reading 1: What words come to my mind when I think of “swords” and “spears” or “ploughshares”? Do I have the equivalent of swords and spears in my office, parish, or life? How does, “They shall beat their swords into ploughshares” relate to me?
Reading 2: In all the places I live and work is there some dimness that I can brighten with my “Christ light”?
Gospel: Advent is about God coming to us. How can I become more aware of the ways Christ comes to me?
The Creed
Prayer of the Faithful
L: Let us be attentive to the Lord’s call to be awake and to prepare for his coming in the Church and the world and let us pray with hope: Lord, hear our prayer.
R: For the Church: that we may grow in our awareness of how God is fulfilling the deepest desires of our hearts, expectantly await God’s continuing work, and learn to recognize God’s presence in our lives, we pray to the Lord…
R: For the world: that God may turn the hearts of the human family so that they turn resources for war into resources for healing and development, we pray to the Lord…
R: For all who must wait: that God may strengthen and comfort all who are waiting with the sick, those awaiting a diagnosis, those separated from loved ones, and those who are held unjustly, we pray to the Lord…
R: For all who are ill: that God’s healing love will sustain and comfort them, we pray to the Lord…
R: For better stewardship of creation: that we may hear the cry of the earth of the damage done and be moved to protect it for future generations to enjoy, we pray to the world…
R: For ourselves: that we may be aware of the signs of the times and that the Spirit will shake us from our complacency to live life fully each day, we pray to the Lord…
L: God our Father, you sent your Son to renew us and our world. Inspire us by the power of his Spirit and sustain us in hope that we may commit ourselves to build a world that is human, peaceful, just, and fraternal. Through Christ our Lord.
A: Amen.
SPIRITUAL COMMUNION
The Lord’s Prayer
Spiritual Communion
A: Jesus, I know and believe in your real presence in the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist. It is you I desire to love and receive above all things. As I am unable to receive your sacramental presence now, come and be with me in heart and soul. Let my entire self be united with you as I welcome you again and know your loving embrace. Amen.
Post Spiritual Communion Reflection
Lord,
we remember a time in our lives when disaster struck:
- we lost a secure job;
- a good friend betrayed us;
- we fell into a habit we thought we had overcome.
We were like people in the days before the Flood
living routine and unsuspecting lives until the disaster struck.
We recognise now that it was your coming,
a moment when you showed us how vulnerable we are.
Lord,
help us to stay awake,
for there are burglars
who break through the security of our lives;
help us to be prepared
to welcome you into our hearts and lives.
We wait in hope for your coming now and always.
CONCLUDING RITE
Concluding Prayer
L: God our Father,
you sent your Son Jesus among us,
but we have been unaware of his presence.
Wake us up, make us recognize him,
that he may be the light of our lives
and that we may lead people to him.
May he build up among us and with us
a world and a kingdom of peace and love
where we serve you in one another.
Through Christ our Lord.A: Amen.
Blessing
L: The Lord bless us, protect us from all evil, and lead us to everlasting life.
A: Amen.
L: Go in the peace of Christ.
A: Thanks be to God.
Conclude with a hymn. For instance: