Last week I shared my preparation for Advent: prayer that centered on a spirituality of the desert, an echo of the beginning of the Gospel of Mark we heard today. This theme was also present in the Office of Readings in the Book of the Prophet Isaiah and a commentary by Eusebius, bishop of Ceaserea.
My prayer with the Office brought me back to God in the wilderness, my "interior desert." This means tuning out distraction and seeking solitude, leaving everything of the former life to start again, but above all it means coming to a place of brokenness and need, the place where I cannot deny my insufficiency and become totally dependent on God and trust that he will transfigure my brokenness into a refuge where my trust in him is deepened.
The voice of one crying in the wilderness: Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight the paths of our God. The prophecy makes clear that it is to be fulfilled, not in Jerusalem but in the wilderness: it is there that the glory of the Lord is to appear, and God’s salvation is to be made known to all mankind.
It was in the wilderness that God’s saving presence was proclaimed by John the Baptist, and there that God’s salvation was seen. The words of this prophecy were fulfilled when Christ and his glory were made manifest to all: after his baptism the heavens opened, and the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove rested on him, and the Father’s voice was heard, bearing witness to the Son: This is my beloved Son, listen to him.
(Full text of the commentary in the Office here).
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