Friday, December 4, 2015

Humility: A Tough Job



Second Sunday of Advent
December 6, 2015
Luke 3:1-6

“A voice of one crying out in the desert: 'Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths (Luk 3:4).”

We want to be successful, to be the number one, and to be the winners. Turning out to be number two after all-out effort is just excruciatingly painful. Today’s gospel affirms this natural inclination to be dominant. Luke began his Gospel by enumerating the alpha males in that time: Caesar Tiberius of Rome, Pontius Pilate of Judea, Herod of Galilea, and Annas and Caiaphas, the high priests of Jerusalem. They were the standard and embodiment of success. Perhaps, they were Barack Obama, Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg of our time. People might adore, envy or fear them, yet still they were the axis where the people revolved.

However, the second part of the Gospel tells us a different character. His name is John the Baptist. Doubtless he was a man of integrity and courage. He converted all his energy and devotion into fearless action and passionate preaching. He was the rising star, and people followed and admired him. I guess it was a dream of every preacher when people from all walks of life come and listen to us. Yet, he received a particular divine mission that he was to prepare the way for someone greater than him. He was not the Messiah.

He might question God, “Why can I not become the number one? I have the skills, right attitudes and strong character. People come to me, they love me and are ready to give their lives for my cause. But, why does God just want me to be second after the Christ? I should be the Christ!” Adding to his inner conflict was some Israelites asking and pressing him to be their Savior. Perhaps, the greatest doubt hit him hard when he was well aware that Jesus, his own Galilean cousin, was the Messiah. “Hi, I am better than this small guy. I am true-blooded Jew, son of Zachariah, the respectable priest, while he was a Galilean, son of Joseph, a poor carpenter. I preach boldly while He cutely narrates parables. I fast and keep vigil while He is busy attending parties. And remember, I am the one who baptized Him!”
 
However, despite the inner tension and overwhelming emotions, John never fell into the great temptation. In fact, he publicly declared, “He must increase, I must decrease! (John 3:30)” John became the embodiment of true humility. A wise man once said that humility before the authority is a duty, humility before equal is a courtesy, but humility before people whom we know that we are much better, is nobility and holiness. John struggled a lot to follow God’s will that went against the very grain of his nature as leader, yet without this inner conflict, his humility is just another politeness. Because of this true humility, John is always remembered throughout generation as the greatest prophet.

We want things so badly, but we know that this is not God’s will. As a seminarian, I am struggling a lot to remain faithful because life inside is often demanding and difficult and knowing that I can have better and easy life outside. A wife who is fighting for her marriage and refuses to leave her sick husband for a better and richer guy, may be another John. A man who is sacrificing his dream job offer because he needs to spend more time with his kids and to educate them to be true Christians, may be another John.  John the Baptist is the appropriate main character of Advent season because he teaches us one precious value that true humility is following God’s will and this is a tough job.

Br. Valentinus Bayuhadi Ruseno, OP

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